Her monologue spans three pages, and it’s heartbreakingly real: “I see other boyfriends forgetting anniversaries, being late, saying the wrong thing. But they feel real. You? You’re never late. You never forget. You never say the wrong thing. And that scares me more than cheating.”
Chapter 29, released [insert latest release date if known, or state "in the latest compiled volume/serialization"], is a masterclass in payoff. After weeks (or months, depending on your reading pace) of simmering tension, half-truths, and the lingering shadow of Reiya’s past, this chapter forces a confrontation that many fans have been both dreading and demanding. soredemo ashita mo kareshi ga ii 29
This is where Chapter 29 earns its keyword value. It’s not about a dramatic breakup or a rival character swooping in. It’s about the quiet erosion of intimacy through hyper-performance. Her monologue spans three pages, and it’s heartbreakingly
Mei, on the other hand, has struggled with her own self-worth. Working a draining job and managing social pressures, she has often used Reiya as an emotional anchor. The problem? Anchors need to be checked for rust. You’re never late
When Reiya and Mei finally meet at their usual café, the atmosphere is glacial. He orders her favorite matcha latte without asking. She notices. Instead of feeling loved, she feels analyzed. This is the core conflict of "Soredemo Ashita mo Kareshi ga Ii 29"—Mei articulates something she’s been suppressing for chapters: “You do things because you know you should, not because you want to.”