[E4: Tanaka's Revolution] A character in the midst of an emotional breakdown begins blaming his suffering anyone and everything, including God. When he finds a gun, he considers that an act of God, too.
A character has a nervous breakdown in episode twelve, involving screaming and erratic behavior. No autistic characters have meltdowns, if that's what this question refers to.
[E13: Where To?] A character is shown on a bridge. Their intent is obvious, but they change their mind and do not jump. The same episode confirms an offscreen car accident was a murder-suicide.
A doctor spends much of the show trying to determine the protagonist's mental state. Ultimately he is diagnosed with visual aphasia, which is cured by the end. Another character's gambling addiction sparks a lengthy mental breakdown where he becomes violent, attempts murder, and later considers suicide.
A character is stalked by a violent character throughout a large chunk of the series, who occasionally leaves traces of their visits eg. smashed house/car windows, gps tracker.
a character mentions being beat and controlled by her boyfriend, that abuse doesnt happen on screen. a child is shown on screen after being beat by his father. a child talks about being emotionally and physically abused by his mother.
Multiple episodes contain flashbacks with physical and/or emotional abuse. Shots of children being hit, with the bruising lasting for several scenes afterwards. One parent outright attempts to murder their young child, though the framing does not show it in full. A high school student's boss makes her seduce older men as part of a scam, which she expresses serious discomfort over.
A character's father is cheating on his mother in a backstory flashback. It details his mother's depression and the ways that his father would hide his affair.
[SPOILERS for episode 11] . . . . . . . A murder happens during a flashback, and the manager of Mystery Kiss vomits (very brief, no visual and quiet audio) while disposing of the body. When you see him & others with blood on their clothes, mute or fast forward 10-15seconds.
There is a scene that takes place in a clinic, but not a traditional hospital scene. Later on, there are a couple scenes that are more traditional hospital scenes.
A character's gambling addiction causes his mental and physical health to deteriorate. He snaps, and becomes obsessed with killing someone who wronged him as well as becoming suicidal. His mental state in the ending is ambiguous but he lives.
a 41 year old man dates an 18 year old girl- (more specific spoilers) the series doesnt glorify this and it ends up being part of a badger game on the girls end. she actually admits to being disgusted by it.
there are scenes in a bathhouse, theyre not sexual at all and the characters all have towels on. plus their designs are usually cutsie animal shapes so the nudity seems far less explicit.
drowning is a trauma of the main character, the final episode shows a drowning scene, though vague flashbacks are shown throughout the show.
a body is disposed of in water but they are dead beforehand.
One character threatens another with a gun, and in episode 6, there is a fairly intense shooting scene, though no one is actually shot. In episode 9, there is another shooting scene. Lastly, episode 12 shows someone actually getting shot.
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