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Asteroid in Love (恋する小惑星(アステロイド), Koisuru Asuteroido) is a Japanese four-panel manga series by Quro, serialized in Houbunsha's seinen manga magazine Manga Time Kirara Carat from January 2017 to June 2024. It has been collected in six tankōbon volumes. An anime television series adaptation by Doga Kobo aired from January to March 2020.
During her childhood, a girl named Mira Konohata befriends Ao Manaka, who she believes is a boy, and makes a promise with Ao to discover an asteroid. Upon entering high school, Mira joins the earth sciences club, a merger of the school's astronomy and geology clubs, and reunites with Ao, who she discovers is actually a girl. Alongside their fellow club members, Mira and Ao take part in various astronomical and geological activities in the hopes of one day discovering an asteroid.
Written and illustrated by Quro, Asteroid in Love was serialized in Houbunsha's Manga Time Kirara Carat magazine from January 28, 2017 to June 28, 2024.[2][3] Its chapters have been collected into six tankōbon volumes.[4]
An anime television series adaptation was announced in the April issue of Manga Time Kirara Carat on February 28, 2019.[5] The series was animated by Doga Kobo and directed by Daisuke Hiramaki, with Yuka Yamada handling series composition, and Jun Yamazaki designing the characters. Takurō Iga composed the series' music. It aired from January 3 to March 27, 2020 on AT-X, Tokyo MX, SUN, KBS, TVA, and BS11.[6] Nao Tōyama performed the series' opening theme song "Aruiteikō!" (歩いていこう!; "Let's Walk There!"), while Minori Suzuki performed the series' ending theme song "Yozora" (夜空; "Night Sky").[7] It ran for 12 episodes.[8] Crunchyroll simulcasted the series with English subtitles, while Funimation began streaming an English dub on March 6, 2020.[9][10]
Characters from the series appear alongside other Manga Time Kirara characters in the 2020 mobile RPG, Kirara Fantasia.[12][13]
Faye Hopper of Anime News Network noted that the show has "fundamental cuteness" but criticized it for not having enough to sustain all the episodes.[14] She further stated that Ao and Mira are "in the same position" at the end of the series as they were at the beginning, describing the connections between Ao and Mira as shallow. She specifically noted that the viewers "never understand how much Ao and Mira matter to each other," saying it never digs deep into the relationships between characters.