Content & Trigger Warnings for WATAMOTE ~No Matter How I Look at It, It's You Guys Fault I'm Not Popular!~ (2013)
9 content warnings identified across 1 season for this show.
Quick Summary
Yes, WATAMOTE ~No Matter How I Look at It, It's You Guys Fault I'm Not Popular!~ (2013) contains 9 content warnings : Homophobia / transphobia (depicted), Stalking / harassment, Eating disorders, Suicide (discussed or ideation), Gaslighting / emotional manipulation, Vomit / emesis (emetophobia), Age-gap relationships (predatory), Explicit sexual content / nudity, Alcohol abuse (depicted).
Check the full breakdown below before you watch.
Set up your trigger profile to see which warnings affect you.
Does It Get Worse?
| Warning | Season | Severity | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Identity & Discrimination | ||||
| Homophobia / transphobia (depicted) | S1 | 1/5 | Depicted | Awkward moments played for comedy involving same-sex misunderstandings |
| Stalking / harassment | S1 | 3/5 | Depicted | Tomoko engages in obsessive observation and following of popular students |
| Mental Health & Emotional | ||||
| Eating disorders | S1 | 1/5 | Referenced | Brief references to body image and food-related anxiety |
| Suicide (discussed or ideation) | S1 | 2/5 | Referenced | Brief references to wanting to disappear or die from social embarrassment |
| Other | ||||
| Gaslighting / emotional manipulation | S1 | 2/5 | Depicted | Tomoko's distorted self-perception leads her to blame others for her social failures |
| Phobias & Sensory | ||||
| Vomit / emesis (emetophobia) | S1 | 2/5 | Depicted | Anxiety-induced nausea and vomiting depicted for comedic effect |
| Sexual Content | ||||
| Age-gap relationships (predatory) | S1 | 2/5 | Depicted | An uncomfortable scene where an older man approaches Tomoko, a high schooler |
| Explicit sexual content / nudity | S1 | 2/5 | Referenced | Sexual references and innuendo in Tomoko's internal monologue and fantasies |
| Substance Use | ||||
| Alcohol abuse (depicted) | S1 | 1/5 | Referenced | Brief reference to alcohol in a social context |
Identity & Discrimination
Awkward moments played for comedy involving same-sex misunderstandings
Tomoko engages in obsessive observation and following of popular students
Mental Health & Emotional
Brief references to wanting to disappear or die from social embarrassment
Other
Tomoko's distorted self-perception leads her to blame others for her social failures
Phobias & Sensory
Anxiety-induced nausea and vomiting depicted for comedic effect
Sexual Content
An uncomfortable scene where an older man approaches Tomoko, a high schooler
Sexual references and innuendo in Tomoko's internal monologue and fantasies





