Produced by the studio Pink Pineapple, "The Animation 2" maintains the visual fidelity established in the first episode. Yuzu Ooka’s original manga art is known for its soft, curvy character designs and expressive faces, and the animation adaptation stays faithful to this style.
If you remove "de House" and "Manga," the core of your search is .
, let me know and I can rewrite it to fit that tone perfectly. Alternatively, if you have the actual Japanese title or author name for Bubble de House , I can make the post more accurate and searchable.
Bubblegum Crash! (1991) – 3-episode OVA sequel to Bubblegum Crisis (1987-1991) Also Known As: Bubblegum Crisis 2 (Manga Entertainment UK/US release) Key Anomaly: A sequel made without the original creator, leading to a fascinating but flawed finale.
The core hook of the series is its setting. Unlike the typical school or fantasy realm often found in the genre, Bubble de House places its protagonist in a surreal, enclosed environment—a house floating within a mysterious bubble. The narrative usually follows a protagonist who finds himself trapped in this isolated space with a group of women, leading to the inevitable genre tropes of survival cohabitation and romantic entanglement.