The story kicks off with a literal bang. Sosuke Aikawa, a typical guy living in a somewhat run-down apartment, is going about his day when the ceiling suddenly gives way. Crashing through the floor from the apartment above is Yuki Shimizu—a beautiful neighbor who quite literally falls into his life.
The central conflict—and the source of the show's title—begins when the ceiling of Sousuke’s room creaks and eventually gives way due to Sunao's heavy practicing for her acting roles. Sunao literally crashes through the floor from the second story, landing directly onto Sousuke in an "accidental" erotic encounter. This incident leads to an unconventional living arrangement where Sousuke finds himself caught in a crowded, semi-cohabitating love triangle with both Sunao and the landlady Yuki. Joshiochi-- 2-kai kara Onnanoko ga... Futtekita...
This paper asks: How does the “falling girl” trope reconfigure ecchi comedy’s relationship with consent, surprise, and repetition? And what does the ceiling hole as a narrative device reveal about the genre’s spatial imagination? The story kicks off with a literal bang