Kanojo ni Naritai Kimi to Boku
I Wanna Be Your Girl
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Kanojo ni Naritai Kimi to Boku

Alternative Titles

Synonyms: The Woman You Are and Me
Japanese: カノジョになりたい君と僕
English: I Wanna Be Your Girl
More titles

Information

Type: Manga
Volumes: Unknown
Chapters: 51
Status: Finished
Published: Jul 24, 2018 to Aug 18, 2020
Genres: Drama Drama, Romance Romance
Theme: School School
Serialization: Ganma!
Authors: Takase, Umi (Story & Art)

Statistics

Score: 7.491 (scored by 18751,875 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #30732
2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #3845
Members: 5,855
Favorites: 76

Available At

Recommendations

Both series are fantastic coming of age stories centered around LGBT themes. Both deal with gender, sexuality, and discovering one's identity. 
reportRecommended by mafuyu_kurosaki
Both manga are about protagonists who are in their teens and suffer from "gender dysphoria". Recommended for people who want to watch LGTBQ+ themed stories. 
reportRecommended by LAIK4
Both of these manga are centered around the idea of a girl falling in love with her childhood best friend; the childhood friend in question ends up coming out as a woman. Friendship, love, and identity are key parts in both manga, and the romance and relationships are pretty well handled, making two heartwarming stories about what it means to love someone. 
reportRecommended by failboycringe
Both follow transgender characters, in Hourou Musuko its a trans boy and a trans girl, while in Kanojo ni Naritai Kimi to Boku its just a trans girl. Both are realistic but I'd say Kanojo ni Naritai Kimi to Boku treats its trans characters much better than Hourou Musuko (considering the trainwreck that are the last couple chapters of Hourou Musuko) since Hourou Musuko is largely a trauma story. Overall, Kanojo ni Naritai Kimi to Boku does a much better job when it comes to gender issues in general, even if Hourou Musuko is much more raw about it. It helps that compared to Hourou  read more 
reportRecommended by Xerneassery
Both are beautiful series that study love and relationship problems in a high school setting with the same amount of seriousness and lightheartedness. 
reportRecommended by Trivialmadness
both deal with lgbt themes and unrequited love from childhood friends in a high school coming of age story, both also have somewhat divisive ending chapters that some people consider rushed but others consider a very fulfilling epilogue to the story 
reportRecommended by mirp448
Both are slightly bittersweet dramas featuring one transgender female main character and other cross-dressing main characters; they focus heavily on gender-study of oneself. Bokura no Hentai is darker, almost disturbing and also concentrates on mental health issues while Kanojo ni Naritai is lighter but thought-provoking.  
reportRecommended by Trivialmadness