>>6335351>You stare at the allocation board for a few minutes, then sigh.(meant to be "moments", words are pain)
(Also I spent an ungodly amount of time on picking out character names for some reason when I could've just grabbed random ones
Some of them may be significant, others random
Some may not even be correct from a Japanese language standpoint, but I tried to make them believable or check them if I took them from the name dictionary
But yeah, if I spent so long on them, may as well post them, feel free to look up the kanji or not bother
Those you met so far:
早田 暁承 - Sawada Kyosuke
由浪 見季 - Yunami Miki
元春 尚徳 - Motoharu Hisanori, you
元春 優雨 - Motoharu Yume, your sister
Others will be revealed as they enter the scene)
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The sliding door rattles open, and the already fairly quiet conversation of your classmates, using the small time before homeroom to get to know each other, dies down completely.
"Good morning, 1-B. My name is Hayazono Keiji, and I'll be your homeroom teacher for this year," he says, flashing a smile.
The man, in his twenties, likely fresh out of university, wears a jacket and office shirt, loose enough not to appear too official. Sensei is taller than an average Japanese, and is of an attractive figure, no homo. He scans the room, checking something in the journal. His gaze lingers on some students with dyed hair - not against school regulations, yet still unusual - but he quickly moves on to the first part of homeroom.
"Let's start with introductions, shall we?" He says, taking out a small pack of paper sheets. "Could you pass them over to everyone..." He trails off, looking at a female student at the first desk.
"Netani Azusa."
"...Netani. I'll give you 5 minutes to fill out the form. Then we'll read them out loud!"
The sheets are simple forms with 3 points.
- Your name.
- Your interests.
- What you want to tell your classmates.
Well... it's not like you have anything in particular you like to do.
You write-in watching dorama and historical videos. Also video games. That's pretty much what you did in junior high as part of the go-home club.
There's also the last point. A classic would be to just say that you "hope to get along with your classmates". Some would crack a joke or make a reference at this opportunity. What will you say?
>Just the standard "get along".>Write-in