Aoi Rio is a high-school student who secretly likes "PreEri" (their version of pretty precure, I guess). One evening he saves a magical girl and from that point on, he teaches her how to be a proper magical girl, using all his anime knowledge and fanboyism in the process. I am 99% sure this is a self-insert manga for Magical Girl fans who have been marginalized by the industry and forced to watch new precure shows and sailor moon sequels while getting 1 "dark" magical girl show or "deconstruction of the magical girl genre" anime as sole content for the last 5 years. But that's something I do not want to get into, just keep in mind that this manga is especially attractive to magical girl fans because they can use Aoi as a self-insert. At the same time, Aoi stays the main focuse of the manga, in terms of what characters we explore the most and see the most (which is kinda surprising given that other self-insert works like a lot of isekais with blank sheet main characters and romcoms like Uzaki, dress-up darling or Nagatoro focus more on the girls because that's what we wanna see), which left us with Sumire (the magical girl) as more of a symbol character for Aoi to project his ideals of a magical girl onto.
What I mean by that, is that Sumire will mostly develop in terms of what Aoi wants because 1) Their relationship is mostly based around her being a magical girl and learning how to be a better magical girl and 2) By giving up the typical way of Magical Girl mangas (like Shugo Chara or Sailor Moon) and giving them a character who is emotionally troubled and then gets saved by Sumire, we don't see a lot of character development on her side (except Aoi saying "Wow, you're just like Eririn!" every time Sumire gets a bit better at fighting) AND we don't get any emotional or moral lesson out of the fights.
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