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Toumei Otoko to Ningen Onna: Sonouchi Fuufu ni Naru Futari


The Invisible Man and His Soon-to-Be Wife

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Eps Seen: / 12
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Alternative Titles

Japanese: 透明男と人間女~そのうち夫婦になるふたり~
English: The Invisible Man and His Soon-to-Be Wife
More titles

Information

Type: TV
Episodes: 12
Status: Finished Airing
Aired: Jan 8, 2026 to Mar 26, 2026
Premiered: Winter 2026
Broadcast: Thursdays at 23:30 (JST)
Licensors: None found, add some
Studios: Project No.9
Source: Web manga
Genres: FantasyFantasy, RomanceRomance
Themes: Adult CastAdult Cast, Urban FantasyUrban Fantasy, WorkplaceWorkplace
Duration: 23 min. per ep.
Rating: PG-13 - Teens 13 or older

Statistics

Score: 7.611 (scored by 1358513,585 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #17352
2 based on the top anime page. Please note that 'Not yet aired' and 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #3671
Members: 47,868
Favorites: 148

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7.61
Ranked #1735Popularity #3671Members 47,868

Synopsis

Yakou, a gentle human woman, works at a detective agency. Tounome is a smart and gentle invisible man. The invisible man's ability is perfect for detective work. However, the blind Yakou can still figure out where Tounome is, even if he disappears. Before they know it, the two become attracted to each other...?

(Source: Seven Seas Entertainment)

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Characters & Voice Actors

Yakou, Shizuka

Main
Nukui, Yuka
Japanese

Tounome, Akira

Main
Azakami, Youhei
Japanese

Jarashi, Luna

Supporting
Sugiyama, Riho
Japanese

Karma

Supporting
Ono, Tomohiro
Japanese

Madaraito, Kousuke

Supporting
Enoki, Junya
Japanese

Kikira, Daichi

Supporting
Fukunishi, Masaya
Japanese

Landlady

Supporting
Arai, Satomi
Japanese

Merfolk

Supporting
Tada, Keita
Japanese

Human Male

Supporting
Wada, Masaya
Japanese

Orc

Supporting
Uchino, Takaaki
Japanese

Staff

Kurosu, Nobuhiko
Producer
Watanabe, Yuuki
Producer
Higurashi, Kouki
Producer
Ishii, Masaki
Producer


Edit

Opening Theme

Preview
Spotify
Apple Music
Amazon Music
Youtube Music
"Ding-dong" by Mao Abe (阿部真央) (eps 2-)
Edit

Ending Theme

"Hoshimegane (星眼鏡)" by Kaori Ishihara (石原夏織)




Reviews

Mar 26, 2026
Recommended
I’ve reused this line at least 10x this season, but I don’t care, I coined it, “the irony of the girl who can’t see being the first person to truly see the invisible guy for who he is” The invisible man and his soon to be wife is genuinely one of the best adult romances I’ve ever seen. It’s straight to the point, no frills, no drama, no love triangles, just peak romantic development and two people helping each other to grow as individuals. People ask for more shows like this all the time and then don’t watch them, so please do yourself a favor ... and give this show a chance. The only remotely off putting thing here is Shizuka’s squealing, but it’s cute as hell, you’ll get used to it. Other than that, you’ve got two adults who are learning to love each other and themselves, while balancing work. It’s a very authentic and beautiful romance. I cried on several occasions just from how wholesome this was and I’m so sad that it’s over.

I’m probably that friend that’s too woke, but I don’t care, I think this story is a social commentary on interracial relationships, racism, ableism and a whole bunch of stuff and it does them all very well. Shizuka being blind is a metaphor for how we should all judge people on who they really are, not what they look like or preconceived notions of their race. For example, Akira’s race being invisible means they’re often associated with crime and other nefarious things because no one can see them. Yes, there’s bad actors in that group, but for the most part they’re just normal people who want to live a long happy life. Until Shizuka came along, Akira was used to being judged by his race rather than his character which is a big plot point they do justice. The author does a good job making the stereotypes and discrimination against the cast feel believable too. I think it perfectly encapsulates how people can have negative experiences with someone and then extrapolate that to the wider group. It’s unfair, but it’s a very human thing to do. I was a big fan of other seemingly minor details like Luna struggling to find a clothing shop which specialized in clothes for people with spotted skin. It reminded me a lot of black women searching for shops that make clothes tailored to curvier women or looking for hair products for Afro hair. There’s just all these little subtle nods to the real world that I picked up on.

The cornerstone of this series and what you most likely will be seated for is of course the two leads’ romance. Spoiler: it’s good. What’s cool is that it starts off really fast with them starting to date and then sort of figuring out the whole relationship thing as they go along. It’s kind of like buying something worrying about how you’ll pay for it later. Most of the season is a mix of Akira working on cases at the detective agency and our two lovebirds learning what it means to be in a relationship and solidifying their feelings. Akira is more experienced, but his relationships have all ended badly with the most recent one being because of his race, something he can’t control which gives him understandably gives him a little pause when considering dating. Shizuka on the other hand has next to no experience and only “sees” Akira for the sort of person he is. She’s the sweetest most innocent thing ever and I know that’s sort of playing into the male wish fulfilment thing, it is a seinen after all, but she comes into her own later in the show and becomes more emotionally and physically assertive with Akira. Like I didn’t expect this series to get as horny and mature as it did down the stretch, but I’ll take it. It’s a nice mix of wholesome fluff with actual serious relationship building. The supporting characters are really good here too. Can I just say how cool it is to have an openly gay male couple that aren’t caricatures or the butt of jokes? Luna was such a badass supporting character as well, I’d love to read to get more of them! Not to mention the parents for both leads being the most loving and welcoming group of people imaginable despite the interracial dating thing? It just feels like this series is encouraging people to go out their comfort zones and try to see people for who they really are rather than what you’ve been taught to think!

The second to last episode of this show might be the most well directed of the entire season. I never would’ve expected that level of animation and direction here, but I was so thankful. It looked absolutely gorgeous. There’s several moments throughout the show that are impressive, though. Project no.9 have developed somewhat of a bad reputation lately, but they redeemed themselves here because this looks amazing.

Again, we need more adult romances so y’all better be supporting this both in anime and manga format. I see people crying online all the time about being tired of kids being sexualized and teenaged romance, so here’s your chance to watch a good romance with an entirely adult cast. It’s right up there with Konosuki from last winter as being some of the best adult romance anime I’ve seen and I for one hope this trend continues.

Tomei Otoko gets 9 out of 10
Reviewer’s Rating: 9
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Apr 6, 2026
Mixed Feelings
If you are reading this and you’re a romance fan genuinely interested in this show, take the following review and my overall score with a grain of salt. I am not far enough up my own ass to not realize that my lack of enjoyment with The Invisible Man and his Soon to be Wife is not an indicator of the show’s quality. It’s probably pretty decent. I’m just not a fan of slow, sweet, fluffy romances, which is exactly what The Invisible Man and his Soon to be Wife is. Regardless, I will publish my honest thoughts regarding the anime, leaving my record.

The ... Invisible Man and his Soon to be Wife is fine. It’s fine I guess. That’s all I can really say.

The OST is alright. The ED and OP are cute. I especially like how the ED utilizes the turquoise coloring from the original web comic. Some shots of the ED are pretty boring, but the direction of both the OP and ED isn’t bad. As far as animation quality goes, I feel like the production committee was shuffled around partly through the series run, because after the halfway point, things start looking very interesting. I’m not a fan of the washed colors, but the animation itself becomes a lot more livelier and interesting to look at. (For some scenes, they even use flat coloring, particularly the opening dinner scene in episode 12!) The character animation is nothing on Frieren’s level, but it's still very charming to watch and gives a lot of personality to the characters.

To get to the point as to why I didn’t enjoy this series, I just couldn’t bring myself to care about the main couple. Like, at all. Shizuka was so kind and sweet that she didn’t leave much of an impression on me. I felt like she was way too embarrassed to do romantic stuff with Akira, despite her being an adult, and not a school girl. There may be an argument here about the infantilization of her blindness, but to be honest, her childish nature revolves around her identity as a woman rather than as a blind person. I guess it’s (probably) not ableism?

I have similar thoughts towards the male lead, Akira. The couple is just so Nice and Good to each other all the time, that it bored me. Shizuka and Akira are fantastic at communicating with one another. They should be, as grown adults. However, two people in a loving, healthy relationship just doesn’t make a fun show for me. I can see some people liking two mature characters going about romance maturely, but for me, I just couldn’t get invested in Shizuka squealing over Akira every five minutes, while Akira is the most respectful man of all time. It’s interesting that the two are in a relationship for 11 out of 12 episodes. Most romance anime tell the couple’s story before the confession even occurs (and even detail detours that happen after the confession). In that regard, one of the series' pros is how straightforward it is in coupling Shizuka and Akira. However, this little bit of intrigue wasn’t enough to keep me invested, or even invest me at all.

Losing interest in the romance, I found what actually kept my attention was the world at large. I found myself wondering what the politics of this society could be like, one where humans are simply one dominant species of hundreds, where creatures of all kinds (and all cultures) lived in peace. My favorite character was Jirashi, a bobcat anthro who had an episode to herself regarding her insecurity about her spotted patterns, and the difficulties of finding clothes that went with them. While I enjoyed this conflict regarding individual identity, I felt a bit disappointed that there didn’t seem to be any major socio-political conflict backdropping against our main couple. In a world where everyone is so vastly different, there has to be some interesting conflicts. If humans can’t tolerate someone who merely has a different skin color, I can’t imagine it’s all happiness and rainbows in a world where a high fantasy elf can be housemates with a sentient giant crab.

However, I am not so far up my own ass. The Invisible Man and His Soon to be Wife isn’t about this at all. It would be a bad idea for the show to focus on that aspect, because the show really only wants to and is only designed to revolve around our main couple, and how they interact with the world--and it wouldn’t be a feel good, fluffy romance, if there were socio-political drama. As much as I would like to explore the world at large, that simply isn’t the point of the show, and it shouldn’t be. Regardless, I still desired the musings of the world beyond Shizuka and Akira’s rose colored glasses

The supporting cast as a whole was mostly okay. I found that I didn’t love most of the nonhuman designs, as creative as the actual races could be. The dark elf/drow, Karma, is funny, but I didn’t feel very much at all for his and his wife Light’s conflict, especially in the last quarter of the series. Akira and Shizuka’s co-workers are also there. I liked the supporting gay couple, Daichi and Madaraito, but really only because they were a gay couple and were there. I am a fujoshi, but I am also a supporter of the LGBT community, so I appreciated seeing queer couples normalized in a setting that wasn’t explicitly a BL, especially since one of them was fat, and both the characters and narrative were extremely normal about that. However, they didn’t do much for me besides being eye-candy, I suppose. I already said most of what I wanted to say about Jirashi, and while I liked her arc, she also didn’t do a lot for me--and again, because as the show should be, its focus is on the main couple, and not their coworkers.

I’m going to have a hard time recommending The Invisible Man and his Soon to be Wife, because I didn’t enjoy it. Despite that, I can recognize its strengths, even if those strengths didn’t appeal to me. It’s hard to tell someone to watch a show you think is probably good but didn’t enjoy yourself. The Invisible Man and his Soon to be Wife will remain at this impasse for me. Perhaps traditional romance fans will enjoy it, but there just wasn’t enough edge to keep me satisfied.
Reviewer’s Rating: 5
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Mar 28, 2026
Not Recommended
(Spanish review on my list)

It's entirely my fault for watching this anime without thinking much about it... I saw the title and saw that the woman was blind, and I thought, "Okay, a society where there are only a few invisible people, and the relationship of how love has to prevail and how they both face discrimination—one for being invisible and the other for being blind, plus wanting to be together despite being of different species—but thanks to how they complement each other, the power of love will overcome everything!"

So I built up expectations... but nope... it turns out it's a modern society inhabited by ... different races and species of magic and fantasy (elves, furries, orcs, humans, invisible people, animal people, and more furries, etc.).

And well, it fell apart. After that, the world was quite... mmm... how to put it?... "good?" "pink?"... there isn't really a major crisis, nor marked discrimination. There is some mention of discrimination, and some characters feel uncomfortable in certain situations, but it's always due to their own perspectives and not so much because someone is being rude to them...

On the other hand, the protagonist is very much a prince charming and the girl is very silly and "sweet," so the relationship, even though they're supposed to be older, felt a bit like a schoolgirl's and was jarring...

I insist that the problem is that I had high expectations, and that's when you'll say:

"Hey Chamin, so you don't recommend this anime?" And I would normally tell you, "No, drop it."
BUT... BUT there's one episode... episode 11, that's going to make me recommend it and say it's a good anime. I really think it's the only good episode, and that's because they actually put effort into it. Even the animation is different. It presents a really good story. You can feel the characters and see their development. It's what I expected from the whole anime. And curiously, what holds that episode together is an extra character. But wow, what a great episode! I really enjoyed it. It's not like I was crying or laughing my head off, but it was a really good extra story with a great atmosphere that made me feel like the rest of the anime was worth it.

I'm not going to give it a super recommendation, nor am I going to give it a high rating because it's just one episode among the other 11 that aren't really worth it. But at least something positive came out of all this.

On second thought, I'm going to put it as "Not Recommended" to get attention, but actually I do recommend it (only chapter 11).
Reviewer’s Rating: 6
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