Boku wa Tomodachi ga Sukunai
It's hard enough to get through high school when you look like a troublemaker, but Kodaka Hasegawa finds that the real problem is finding someone who wants to be his friend. When he finds the sharp-tongued Yozora talking to her imaginary friend, they decide to start the Neighbors Club, a last resort for people who are socially awkward and don't mean to be alone. This isn't a polished, feel-good story about bonding; it's a funny and often harsh look at people who are really bad at being human together. You get to see a group of misfits who try too hard to make friends by playing strange games and failing at social experiments, only to realize that their shared loneliness is what brings them together. It perfectly captures that awkward, restless feeling of wanting to fit in but not knowing how to start a normal conversation. There is a surprisingly honest commentary on how we put our insecurities on other people under all the crazy comedy and strange characters. This messy, unfiltered look at social failure will hit home in the most fun way possible if you've ever felt like you were on the outside looking in.