@platina_vi: I think it was implied by the peculiarities of the genre :-) The Japanese are a very exhausted nation, who process to a semi-fainting state, constantly under the yoke of stress and pressure from parents, superiors and society. Therefore, there is a special genre of anime iyashikei (iyashikei? yasikei? I have no idea how to pronounce it, but it translates as "therapeutic") - in which everything is fine, everything always turns out, there are either no problems at all, or they are solved without much effort and the characters are always happy. A pure representative of the iyashikei genre is, for example, "Caring Fox Senko-san", but it is sometimes mixed with other genres. For example, the first season of "By the Grace of Gods" was baked with an admixture of iyashikei. I wouldn't be surprised if "Farming Life in another World" falls into the same category
@KonstantinRomeow: I like iyashikei in the genre of realism, in issekai I usually like the emphasis on the fantasy world (urban planning) more. But the further you look, the more you get used to it)
Ahaha is the first villager... And the guy swung) Although he has both a silkworm and a peseli there. And then there's the vampire bride. Definitely a good everyday.
Following the "Arifureta", this anime tries to convince me that vampires are top vayfu, but I am still firmly in the camp of fans of the best monster girls lamias :-)
He laughed wildly at the moment in which the spider wove a handkerchief with a spider icon in the corner. At this point in the narrative, any remnants of realism said "bye-bye."
Although he has both a silkworm and a peseli there. And then there's the vampire bride.
Definitely a good everyday.
He laughed wildly at the moment in which the spider wove a handkerchief with a spider icon in the corner. At this point in the narrative, any remnants of realism said "bye-bye."