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Fresh off the boat (or should we say bullet train?) in Tokyo, Nobara comes face to face with her future teacher Satoru Gojo and classmates Megumi Fushiguro and Itadori Yuuji. Her first impression of them is less than favourable and more than accurate. She describes Yuuji as a country bumpkin (accurate, he did just arrive from Sendai) who probably ate his own boogers (he did eat a 1000-year-old finger, so we can buy that too). Megumi doesn’t fare much better, she thinks he’s the stuck-up arrogant type who probably set fire to oil-slicked seagulls (a mild exaggeration, but he did beat up half his junior high’s population). And let’s not even get started on Gojo, who claimed he would take his students on a Tokyo tour to glittering and glamorous Roppongi as a welcome for the newbies, yet dumped them at an abandoned building and sent them curse hunting. What a drag?! And we’re just getting started.
In a series of inexplicably frustrating events, Nobara had her skirt stolen by her teacher for a rather unflattering impression, had her presumed dead classmate whom she mourned pull a jack-in-the-box return move months later and had Megumi, in an attempt to rescue her, stick her in a frog (she had mixed feelings given her frog hatred).
But wait, don’t they all get along famously? Well, yes they do. After all, in a world where your comrades make all the difference between life and death, how could they not? For all of her grievances against them, Nobara definitely does have some affection for her fellow compatriots and (possibly) well-intentioned teacher. She can appreciate their finer qualities, like strength, loyalty, perseverance, kindness and intelligence. She just has to finish grinding her teeth at whatever facepalm inducing shenanigans they get up to first.
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