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To survive, Joshiochi would need a twist. Perhaps the fall happens in reverse in the finale: Kaito falls up into her apartment. Or perhaps the building itself is a time machine. Or—most likely—it ends with a wedding where the bride is thrown not into the air, but through the reception hall’s ceiling.

They spent nights sitting on their respective floors, looking through the jagged opening at each other, sharing dreams and anxieties that felt easier to confess to a face framed by broken timber. What started as a structural disaster turned into a vertical romance Joshiochi-- 2-kai kara Onnanoko ga... Futtekita...

The early 2020s saw a proliferation of short-form (3–7 minute) ecchi anime adapted from web manga or doujinshi. Among these, Joshiochi: 2-kai kara Onnanoko ga... Futtekita... (henceforth Joshiochi ) stands out for its hyper-literal title: “Girls falling from the second floor… kept coming down…” The protagonist, Sōta, finds his daily life disrupted by a mysterious hole in his ceiling that deposits different girls into his room—and often onto his futon. Unlike typical harem setups requiring gradual relationship building, Joshiochi collapses narrative distance into instantaneous physical proximity. To survive, Joshiochi would need a twist