Arifred Yamamoto, the creator of the Rikei ga Koi no Ochita no de Shoumei Shite Mita (Science Fell in Love, so I Tried to Prove It) manga, announced on his official Twitter account that the TV anime adaptation of the series will be getting a second season.
The manga debuted on G-mode's Comic Meteor website in 2016. A live-action TV series of the manga premiered in September 2018 and aired for four episodes. A live-action film premiered in February 2019.
Arifred Yamamoto also shared a new illustration to celebrate the announcement.
The first season premiered in Japan on Amazon Prime Video with all 12 episodes on January 10. The show also aired on TV in Japan. Crunchyroll streamed the show as it aired and also streamed an English dub.
Crunchyroll describes the series as:
What happens when a science-inclined girl and boy who are deeply passionate about research fall in love?
An intelligent woman named Himuro Ayame who is a science graduate student at Saitama University happens to ask fellow science graduate student Yukimura Shinya out.
Of course, there’s no logical reason for this love! But as a science and engineering major, not being able to logically prove love would mean that those feelings aren’t real, and they’d fail as a science student. With that in mind, the two drag everyone else in the lab into trying various experiments to prove love actually exists.
Dating experiments, the pursuit of a componential explanation for “love”, measuring heart rate, and defining mood value...
There are plenty of laughs and heart-racing moments in this scientific romantic comedy where these loveable and unique science students try to prove that love logically exists!
What happens when a science-inclined girl and boy who are deeply passionate about research fall in love?
An intelligent woman named Himuro Ayame who is a science graduate student at Saitama University happens to ask fellow science graduate student Yukimura Shinya out.
Of course, there’s no logical reason for this love! But as a science and engineering major, not being able to logically prove love would mean that those feelings aren’t real, and they’d fail as a science student. With that in mind, the two drag everyone else in the lab into trying various experiments to prove love actually exists.
Dating experiments, the pursuit of a componential explanation for “love”, measuring heart rate, and defining mood value...
There are plenty of laughs and heart-racing moments in this scientific romantic comedy where these loveable and unique science students try to prove that love logically exists!