Ichigo Mashimoro is probably the one anime where I can’t just treat it as a regular anime.
I’m seriously saying that you’ve never seen anything like this before. It is slice of life to a tee.
I'll be sure to give this
Ichigo Mashimaro series a try sometime then.
Have you ever seen
Minami-ke? The first season is from the same studio, Daume, and it has a somewhat similar dry sense of humour although with many differences, most importantly how each of the three sisters is in a different level of school and therefore there's a much larger supporting cast of characters.
Mitsuboshi Colors features kids around the same age as Matsuri and Ana and I strongly suspect the original mangaka, Katsuwo, might have been an assistant to
Ichigo Mashimaro's Barasui as both manga, which run in the same magazine,
Dengeki Daioh, had a very similar style, with another major clue being that
Ichigo Mashimaro became a lot more infrequent around the same time that Katsuwo started publishing his own manga, starting with
Eureka Seven AO followed by
Hitori Bocchi and then
Mitsuboshi Colors. Meanwhile, Barasui's art style in
Ichigo Mashimaro has noticeably shifted towards being much softer than the solid linework it had up to November 2012.
Mitsuboshi Colors has more of a clothesline plot than
Ichigo Mashimaro, with the "Colors" being the self-proclaimed protectors of Tokyo's Ueno Park and they have interactions with adults, a rare sight in
Ichigo Mashimaro, that are more reminiscent of
Yotsuba &! than the one fifth grade teacher in
Ichigo Mashimaro who is always punishing that one character whose name I forget for seemingly no reason at all.
Gabrleil Dropout by Ukami, another
Dengeki Daioh title that got an anime adaptation, is a little like what
Ichigo Mashimaro would be if the characters were angel and demon girls on Earth (which actually kind of happened once in
Ichigo Mashimaro proper when Miu bumped her head doing a backflip and dreamed of the afterlife) and has another major parallel to
Ichigo Mashimaro in that both series take place in the same city, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, which is the largest city in Japan outside of Tokyo in terms of area but which is only 20th in terms of population.