Would a middle-aged online shopper in another world spend his dungeon loot on lewd figures from J-List? Probably! At least if he had an internet connection and reliable trans-isekai shipping. The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World understands that we middle-aged men like nice things. But, of course, the show isn’t about to give screen time to the latest cast-off figures. Copyright laws, you know. We’ll have to be content with economic survival in another world and friendships with benefits when Kenichi Hamada proves the true potential of a disposable income.



The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World doesn’t offer the same hints in the English version of its title as it did in the original Japanese title. アラフォー男の異世界通販生活 — transcribed into romaji as Arafō Otoko no Isekai Tsūhan Seikatsu — includes a suggestion that main character Kenichi Hamada (voiced by Junichi Suwabe) is an eligible bachelor. That’s important if you’re trying to sniff out this season’s anime waifus. Now you know Kenichi is a waifu magnet.
Your Brief Synopsis
Kenichi was a salaryman drone until he realized the long hours and hard work would kill him. He changed track to lead the slow life of a subsistence farmer in Japan. Then the Dues Ex Machina of quick cuts unexpectedly sent him to isekai land. No time wasted here!
Kenichi has no health bar or stats, so how will our protagonist survive!? Mail-order! He has his Amazon (sorry, Shangri La) account and can order whatever he wants. And he benefits from instantaneous shipping. Truly, this is nirvana. Or Shangri La. Whatever. So, lean back in your recliner and watch our boy Ken build his economic empire and fight monsters with express-shipped sporting goods.
Boy Scout’s Weaponized Amazon Account
Bear Grylls and Ray Mears never isekaied into a survival situation. But, if they were, they’d know what to do. Even if there were monsters around. For the rest of us, we might have some Boy Scout training or experience from that one camping trip with Dad to fall back on. Most of us survive — daily — through the swift keystrokes needed to input our credit card details.
But we are men, and we are wild at heart. Hours watching the Dakar rally and History’s Alone proved that inside the heart of every desk-bound keyboard jockey is an adventurer, waiting for a reason to dust off the rucksack and expensive camping equipment and “go wild.”
Wild at Heart Middle-Aged Online Shoppers
That’s why the premise of The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World is so fulfilling for middle-aged dudes like us. We should know we can still take nature by the horns and wrestle it into submission. If there are flushing toilets nearby.
Look, I don’t think modern city life has made us soft. Anyone who has survived a visit to the bank on payday can attest to the dangers of the concrete jungle. But the primal urge to paint our faces with mud and bring down large, deadly animals will never die. Middle-Aged Online Shopper understands this but pitches the story where we’re at, with jokes about double-entry accounting and the engineering marvel of clothes pegs.






Middle-Aged Online Shopper is a genius take on the isekai genre because it knows its audience well. Too well. If you watch the show and find yourself scratching your balding forehead thinking, “This is me,” then you know Middle-Aged Online Shopper has your number. The series is essentially an anime version of American Beauty (1999) with a web store shopping cart without the angst.
B-Class Animation Saves Energy for Where It Counts: Waifus
The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World’s worst letdown is its animation.
Call me “Mr. Old School,” but “back in my day,” they made “proper art.” Okay, I’ll spare you the grumpy diatribe. Can I at least have background characters with lifelike poses and obvious details like horses’ manes?
No?
I bet it’s because the producers spent the animation budget all on the waifus. Middle-Aged Online Shopper really does know its audience. Resource management has a double meaning here, guys. Yup. Here at J-List, we can turn any phrase into a double entendre. It’s a superpower.
Middle-Aged Online Shopper Wins Waifus
So, how does Kenichi manage those sexy resources? He’s here for the slow life with a low-responsibility wife, and he’ll take his adult “opportunities” as they come. No chasing cat-girl tail for Kenichi when the cat-girl tail will come to him.
Azaela (voiced by Yurika Kubo) is a waitress at an inn. She likes sweets and Kenichi.



Myarey (voiced by Miyu Tomita) is a cat girl who likes it spicy. Um… I mean, she likes spice. Get your head out of the gutter, boys. Cat girl anatomy question: where are those nips? Middle-Aged Online Shopper won’t offer any cat nip.



Daddy’s girl Primula Mallow (voiced by Kaede Hondo) is the strongest contestant for Kenichi’s heart. And she looks a lot like a blue-eyed version of Marin Kitagawa from My Dress-Up Darling. Can you be a gyaru in a world without Tokyo street-fashion culture? I’m betting on a Grease (1978) style makeover in Primula’s future because Kenichi has access to more makeup products than Olivia Newton-John had ever dreamed of.



I hope you don’t have cat allergies. Nyamena (voiced by Yū Kobayashi) is another cat girl for Ken-senpai’s family. I hope he can order plenty of supplements to maintain his stamina.



No matter who it is, Kenichi will employ his time-tested tactics of treats and sketched tributes. Make a girl feel as important as she is, and you’ll win her heart, just like Kenichi-senpai.
Let Male-Pattern Balding Determine Your Anime Watching
The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World is a great show if you’re between 40 and 65 (you lucky, paunchy punk). Because the show meets us where we are without ever being preachy or trying too hard. However, the horrendous animation has plenty of unsightly lines — just like its fans. With that in mind, this isn’t a show for everyone, but it hits right for its target demographic. Grab the non-alcoholic beer and reduced-salt pretzels and give the show a watch.



Yoshihide Yuuzumi directed The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World on behalf of East Fish Studio. Masanao Akahoshi wrote the anime’s script, and Kujira Yumemi produced the anime’s music. East Fish Studio has only been around since 2017, but that’s no excuse for mediocre animation. I hope they’ll innovate and give us something to remember them by.
The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World streams on Crunchyroll with various subtitle options available. It earns a commendable Chibi Megumi rating of 3 (free shipping included). Give it a watch if you’re so inclined.
Are you watching The Daily Life of a Middle-Aged Online Shopper in Another World? Who is your favorite waifu of the series?
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