Kaboku has always just gone with the flow, marching in step to the drumbeat of the expectations of those around him: parents, school, plans for the future. It feels predictable, safe, and... empty. But one night, Kaboku's at school late, and he happens on a girl alone, moving wildly, turning a blank space of concrete into a canvas. This is Hikari Wanda, a member of the hip-hop dance club. Kaboku is immediately smitten, but the road to stepping out of his shell is a long one. The club is almost entirely girls, and they're all, well, way better than him. What's ahead is unknown, and that's terrifying, but it also means, for the first time in Kamore
The star of the show is definitely Coffees striking dance art which goes from strength to strength and will appeal to anyone whos a dance fan but Kabo is a sympathetic and relatable protagonist (just as Yatora is in Blue Period) and much of the appeal of the story is watching him grow in self-confidence through expressing himself through dance. Read Full Review
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