Shin Michima is an unpopular novelist. He has lived with five mysterious women in the same house for half a year. Minami Shirakawa loves coffee. Hitomi Tsukamoto loves black tea, yoga and reading good books. Yuki Kobayashi is a polite woman and loves roasted green tea. Midori Suzumura is a high school student and loves acerola juice. Nanaka Seki loves drinking milk.
These five women pay Shin a million yen every month for rent and living expenses, about 30x higher than normal. They have rules in the house and questions about the women are banned.
A 31-year old novelist struggling to produce a bestseller, often criticized by his literary rivals and the women in the household about his lack of good quality writing. His father is condemned on death row following the murder of three victims including Shin's mother, her lover, and a policeman who had arrived at the scene after they were killed. Shin receives daily accusatory messages on the fax machine from an anonymous sender.
A nudist at home who has a mysterious demeanor and occasionally violent tendencies. President of the ultra-luxury Call Girl Club. Minami refers to Shin as "Novel".
Hitomi is the daughter of influential novelist, Hibiki Ogie, who had died 11 years ago. She appears to be infatuated with Shin, often becoming frustrated when he does not pick up on her subtle hints.
A 17-year-old high school girl. Midori was raised in an orphanage since her relinquishment by her parents at the age of three. As she got older, Midori took on part-time work to save for her independence from the orphanage and its unconventional rules. She had bought a lottery ticket and won one billion Yen prior to moving into the house and she appears to have feelings for Shin.
She is very clumsy and loves drinking milk. As a famous actress, Nanaka began her career as a child.
Media
Manga
Written and illustrated by Shunju Aono [ja], Million Yen Women was serialized in Shogakukan's seinen manga magazine Weekly Big Comic Spirits from November 16, 2015,[2] to September 5, 2016.[3] Shogakukan collected its chapters in four tankōbon volumes, released from March 30 to November 30, 2016.[4][5] An extra chapter, published as "episode 0", was released on April 10, 2017.[6]
A 12-episode television drama adaptation, starring Radwimps's lead vocalist Yojiro Noda in his first television show,[9] started streaming on Netflix on April 7, 2017,[10] and was broadcast on TV Tokyo from April 14 to June 30 of that same year.[11][a] The theme song is "Tadayō Kanjō" (漂う感情, "Drifting Emotions") by Kotringo.[13]