Synopsis
Hana Tachibana is living with Ryousuke Fujisawa, an incredibly handsome and capable perfect man.
This relationship started with Ryousuke’s confession, and while it seemed to be going well on the surface, Hana—who loves her work—became so absorbed in her job that she unknowingly started neglecting him.
“He might be losing interest in me… or maybe even cheating?”
Filled with anxiety but still caught up in her busy days, Hana accidentally spots Ryousuke with an unfamiliar woman.
Shocked by what she sees, Hana breaks a promise she’d made with Ryousuke long ago…
From misunderstandings and miscommunications, her supremely devoted boyfriend spirals into jealous passion, unleashing all the desire he’d been holding back. A sweet love comedy with a happy ending.
96 pages
Manga: KEI
Get “Making the Perfect Boyfriend J” on DLsite
This Week’s Top Rankings:
Editorial Review
This is a cohabitation-centered pure love work that trades the typical jealousy-as-conflict framework for something more interesting: jealousy as a catalyst for emotional honesty. Rather than positioning the couple at odds, the narrative uses Hana’s misunderstanding of Ryousuke’s faithfulness as a pressure valve, forcing both characters to confront how their daily routine has created distance despite physical proximity. That’s a sharper emotional hook than most girls’ manga offer in this space, where cohabitation often defaults to comfortable domesticity.
What distinguishes this beyond its premise is the specific dynamic: Ryousuke’s possessive response isn’t treated as toxic but as the flipside of his deep investment in the relationship. The combination of pure love framing with jealousy and verbal teasing creates narrative tension without requiring adversarial character positioning—he’s not angry at her, he’s demonstrating how much he wants her attention back. KEI’s approach here suggests a writer interested in how anxiety and miscommunication can actually deepen intimacy rather than fracture it. The 96-page length is substantial enough to develop this arc with breathing room, avoiding the rushed pacing that can undermine emotional payoff in shorter works.
The tags indicate this leans heavily into physical expression of emotional reconnection—the squirting and creampie content aren’t incidental but central to how the work resolves its central tension. For readers, this means the sexual content functions as narrative culmination rather than standalone appeal.
This lands squarely for readers who want their physical intimacy grounded in emotional stakes, specifically those who enjoy watching a couple rebuild connection after taking each other for granted. If you’re drawn to pure love narratives with real relationship friction and a partner who expresses desire as devotion, this delivers exactly that framework with substantive page count to develop it properly.
Related Tags:
Creampie | squirting | Pure Love | lovey-dovey | Cohabitation
Interested? Get the free trial here ↓





