Tsuki Ga Kirei -

The soundtrack, composed by Takuro Iga (of the group Yukueshirezutsurezure), blends soft piano and acoustic guitar with ambient sounds—train announcements, the chirping of crickets, footsteps on pavement. The opening theme “Imakoko” by Nao Touyama and the ending theme “Tsuki ga Kirei” by Takahashi Nana wrap each episode in warmth and nostalgia. The use of Dvorak’s “Symphony No. 9 (From the New World)” as a recurring motif for Kotaro adds an unexpected but fitting layer of emotional gravity.

Tsuki ga Kirei is not for viewers seeking high drama or fantasy. It is for those who remember—or wish to remember—what it truly felt like to fall in love for the first time: the clumsiness, the butterflies, the quiet joy of holding someone’s hand. In a medium often obsessed with wish-fulfillment, this anime offers something rarer: a sincere, heartfelt mirror held up to real life. Tsuki ga Kirei

The final episode—and particularly the post-credits scene—is widely regarded as one of the most satisfying conclusions in romance anime. Without giving everything away, the series follows the couple through the trials of long-distance relationships and personal growth. The ending does not cheat its audience with an ambiguous “and they continued to be friends.” Instead, it offers a mature, earned resolution that shows their love enduring the passage of time. The soundtrack, composed by Takuro Iga (of the