Moyashimon



Moyasimon: Tales of Agriculture (also spelled Moyashimon) is a still ongoing manga series, adapted to anime in 2007 (with a second season coming up in 2012) and live-action in 2010, which tells the account of Tadayasu Sawaki. The son of a yeast maker and a first-year college student at an agricultural university, Tadayasu has the ability to see, touch and talk with all sorts of micro-organisms and bacteria. These microbes appear to him as bug-sized creatures that come in all sorts of shapes with whom Tadayasu can interact.


 * Tadayasu Souemon Sawaki - The main protagonist of the series. His middle name is usually omitted.
 * Kei Yuuki - Tadayasu's childhood friend, the son of a sake brewer who secretly
 * Professor Itsuki - Professor at the university. A mysterious old man with a passion for fermentation of all kinds who knows of Sawaki's ability.
 * Haruka Hasegawa - Postgraduate student and Itsuki's assistant. A short-tempered, no-nonsense and somewhat sadistic woman from a wealthy, over-protective family.
 * Hazuki Oikawa - A freshman and a compulsive neat freak who carries disinfectant tissues and antibacterial sprays around with her.
 * Kaoru Misato - A sophomore with a mustache and beard who wants to use his knowledge of brewing to earn some easy money.
 * Takuma Kawahama - A short, overweight sophomore and Kaoru's buddy. Seems to have a thing for insects and such.
 * Aoi Mutou - Itsuki and Hasegawa's assistant; known around campus as "Miss Agriculture", but also know for being a bit of a lush.

The Department of Agriculture building on the school's campus is a near identical replica of the Real Life University of Coimbra in Portugal (up to and including the school flag being the Portuguese flag).

This series provides examples of:

 * Art Shift: Kawahama and Misato's faces occasionally turn to a high-contrast pride/sarcasm expression reminiscent of the Moon's "face" or the Puchuus from Excel Saga.
 * Bastard Girlfriend: Hasegawa. In-universe Misato is horrified by Hasegawa's drunken advances.
 * Beauty Is Never Tarnished: Pretty much averted.
 * Bedmate Reveal
 * Blessed With Suck: Tadayasu Sawaki's ability to see microbes.
 * Bokukko: Aoi Mutou
 * Brought Down to Normal: Tadayasu Sawaki loses his ability to see microbes for a while.
 * Can't Hold Her Liquor: Hasegawa.
 * Catch Phrase: The various fungi and bacteria seem to be fond of saying "Kamosu zou!" ("Let's brew!")
 * Character Filibuster: Do not get Professor Itsuki started on the wonders of fermentation, unless you want to get hit by one of these.
 * In the manga, his explanations fill entire panels.
 * Chekhov MIA: The missing student from the first episode.
 * Club President: Aoi Mutou; of the UFO Club.
 * Comedic Sociopathy: Haruka's tendency to beat the crap out of Misato and Kawahama at the slightest provocation.
 * Cool Old Guy: The professor.
 * Dancing Theme: Dancing microbes in the opening and closing credits.
 * Deus Ex Machina
 * Did Not Do the Research: Generally averted, but a few inaccuracies persist, the most prominent being that you just do not open a can of Surströmming inside a building.
 * Admittedly, very few people know you don't open Surströmming in a building, partly because very few people have heard of it outside of the Swedish (who invented the thing), Moyasimon readers, or people who spend too much time reading Cracked.com lists of 'most disturbing foods ever'.
 * To be fair, that was probably part of the joke when they used it to get out of the restaurant. Doesn't explain the earlier scene in the lab, though.
 * Dirt Forcefield: Averted, when Aoi Mutou first shows up, she is dirty, not to mention smelly, as she hasn't bathed in two weeks.
 * Dude Looks Like a Lady: The author apparently had to remind readers in early chapters of the manga that Kei was the son of a sake brewer, not the daughter.
 * Educational Short: The Bacteria Theatre at the end of each episode.
 * Elaborate University High: It has to be as it is an agricultural/eco-technological based university.
 * Elegant Gothic Lolita
 * Fat and Skinny: Misato and Kawahama.
 * Femme Fatalons: Haruka uses these when she punishes Takuma and Kaoru, drawing blood in the process.
 * Foreign Queasine: Itsuki-sensei has a fondness for bizarre fermented foods from around the world.
 * Gargle Blaster: A food version -- hongehoe, fermented stingray sashimi. Tastes fine until the ammonia hits the nasal cavity...
 * Gay Aesop
 * Gender Blender Name: Kaoru Misato gets a double dose of this; both his first and last names can be used as female names.
 * Gonk: Takuma Kawahama and Kaoru Misato.
 * Green Aesop: But averted in some instances. On the one hand, the whole show is about ecology. On the other hand, treating fields with chemicals works (agricultural science!) and biofuel-powered tractors don't (it's still just an experimental model, and the coal-powered tractors work just fine).
 * Groupie Brigade: In the live-action adaptation, the UFO Club is depicted as this for Aoi Mutou.
 * Ho Yay, not to mention Les Yay
 * Kawaisa: All the bacteria and fungi are cute, even pathogens like O-157 E. coli and MRSA.
 * Kissing Under the Influence:.
 * In the manga,.
 * Love Potion: Professor Itsuki's "Sexual" chocolate.
 * Mascot: A. oryzae, the microbe pictured above.
 * Ojou: Haruka Hasegawa, but she's more like an empress than a princess-type.
 * Overprotective Dad: Haruka's father.
 * Paper Fan of Doom: Used as weapons during the spring festival.
 * Pragmatic Adaptation: The live action series, which starts off the bootlegging sake scene much earlier and Kei appears later on as a student, rather than joining the school with Sawaki at the same time.
 * The Professor: Itsuki, who goes to great lengths in the pursuit of agricultural science.
 * Refuge in Audacity: Sawaki, Misato, and Kawahama avoid an awkward What Did I Do Last Night situation by making it look even more ridiculous.
 * Ridiculously Cute Critter: Every single microbe.
 * Robotic Reveal:
 * Say It With Hearts
 * School Festival: Very unusual in that everyone is locked in for entire time the festival is on and you have to figure out the rules for this year's event before the rules hit you.
 * Secret Keeper
 * Selective Obliviousness: Aoi's former boyfriend suddenly disappeared from her life without a trace. There was a mysterious piece of paper left behind in his empty apartment with indecipherable runes written on it (rumours that it's actually a note with the words "I'm in love with someone else" are all filthy filthy lies). Obviously, he was kidnapped by aliens, and if you try to insinuate something else she will drink herself into a stupor.
 * Shown Their Work: If you're willing to accept that the over-enthusiastic Itsuki tends to overstate the importance of microbes from time to time, most of the factual information given on microbes in Moyasimon is generally correct.
 * As amazing as it sounds, Itsuki's obsession with microbes Transforming The World is itself an example of Showing Its Work.
 * For that matter, other than some of the "human drama" bits, the depiction of the agricultural university IS rather similar to what goes on in Real Life at agricultural research universities (or ag-research colleges of state universities).
 * The Snark Knight: Hasegawa is committed to science; bad science or You Fail Logic Forever in her presence will trigger a rant.
 * Speaks Fluent Germ: Tadayasu.
 * Stripperific: Haruka Hasegawa's usual clothing under her labcoat.
 * Those Two Guys: Misato and Kawahama.
 * Transsexual:
 * Trash of the Titans: The student-run dorm, especially Misato and Kawahama's room.
 * Tsundere: Haruka Hasegawa and Hazuki Oikawa.
 * Twelve Episode Anime: Well, eleven eps plus three "Microbe Deluxe Theatre" Educational Short films.
 * Wall of Text : Itsuki-sensei is prone to delivering these in increasingly small font-sizes. Sometimes everyone else gets squished between the speech bubbles.
 * Weirdness Magnet: Tadayasu seems like the closest to normal in his little circle of friends.
 * What Did I Do Last Night: Hasegawa at the end of volume 2.
 * What Do You Mean Its Not Awesome?: The series is prone to this, especially the live-action adaptation.
 * Whip It Good: Hasegawa.
 * Wholesome Crossdresser:
 * Widget Series: ...Yep.
 * Wild Take: Sawaki seems to alternate between being snarky and being weirded out.