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“`plaintext Even if I hide their name, won’t it be obvious? “Those who are putting in a lot of effort for the cultural festival, playing in a band and feeling youth” That guy was badmouthing from the corner of the classroom. The way he laughed, his eyes were said to be the color of tobacco stains. What kind of story is this? That assistant later went on to draw manga about putting in effort for the cultural festival and playing in a band, while the gorilla continued to create comics like a late-night radio show filled with badmouthing. I mean, they’ve already called him a gorilla. “`
I worked hard, even though I took a day off on the event day.
I was working hard because I wanted to finish quickly and go home.
I won’t speak ill, but I also didn’t have any motivation.
Depending on how you look at it, I think it’s the worst pattern.
Our high school didn’t have any special events.
Since you said you are going to create a giant maze in class, I drew up a blueprint.
After I finished my part at the cultural festival, I had nothing to do for the remaining time and just went home.
I ran away because it was too troublesome, so I’m worse than a gorilla.
I went bankrupt because of COVID.
I was engrossed in TCG in an empty classroom.
Well, if I try a little hard, I ended up having a slightly good vibe with a girl.
I’ll do my best.
It’s fun.
Most of the girls around me were terrible.
I used to be an introvert, so when I really tried my best, I felt a heavy atmosphere like “ew… so gross…” and it got me down.
I skipped on that day.
The people here will prepare, but they might not show up on the day or could be holed up in the bathroom.
I worked hard on the club activity’s presentation and succeeded, but…
I feel a little guilty for neglecting the class.
Since I could draw, I was in charge of the design for the cheering flags for the sports festival.
I was suddenly cast as a monkey on that day and spent the whole day going “Uukiki!”
It was super fun, but I caught a cold because I was half-naked.
The cultural festival was like hell because the whole class was so indifferent.
I did my best.
I stayed behind, but I stumbled upon a scene where a girl who should have gone home an hour earlier was getting cozy with her boyfriend, and it felt ridiculous.
But I did my best until the end.
>>23
Great!
It was a side errand, but…
It was genuinely fun to work together and have a lively time even until a later hour than usual.
Since I was the only one who could draw, I was exempted from everything else in exchange for designing all the signs.
School events are sadly more enjoyable the harder you try.
Cultural festivals are the epitome of fun, like coming to school during summer break and eating ice cream with the girls in the class while preparing and having a great time, it’s still a joyful memory.
I left school and went to see the ocean.
Club activities in the morning.
Having lunch and preparing for the cultural festival in the afternoon.
I wasted my summer vacation and ended up taking a gap year, but it wasn’t such a bad memory.
Since there was no such guy in the corner of this type of classroom, I think this only exists in anime and manga where you line up for lunch on the rooftop.
There was a battle for buying lunch.
I remember that those who were good at drawing or could play the piano were evenly distributed among the classes for school events.
I went out under the pretense of grocery shopping and ended up playing.
I had social skills until high school, so I enjoyed it.
I had a high fever of 38 degrees for three consecutive years during the high school cultural festival, but I had a lot of fun.
I was really busy since I was in the student council.
I received the Grand Prize for building a Japanese castle about 1 meter tall.
When we formed a team with only the top students in math, it became quite precise.
It was almost like a gorilla.
I don’t even remember if there was a cultural festival or not.
I remember the sports festival, though.
The haunted house is popular, but there is a limit set for the whole school on which classes can run a haunted house. As expected, my class also wanted to do a haunted house, but I presented the attraction I wanted to do in front of the class, showed the cost analysis, and convinced them.
I mainly helped with the club activities, but when it came to the cultural festival, I was so busy with the class’s presentation that I didn’t do anything for the club activities.
Since everyone in the class was contrary, I went all out in preparation and during the actual event as a counter to the trend of not putting in effort.
We practiced for the choir competition, properly held the sports festival, and waved our penlights on stage.
>>43
The performance was serious, but I was envious because I had no involvement in the stage aspect.
I worked really hard selling fried chicken, and as a result, I went to university.
Although it was decided by majority vote to create the safest giant painting,
I didn’t submit more than half of the design proposals by the deadline, and I didn’t prepare the tools either, among other things.
In the end, what was created was a blackboard-sized painting.
The other student’s remark, “So lame!” hit me hard and it was hell.
When I really went all out with the haunted house and brought in speakers to create atmosphere, there was a moment when a child waiting in the hallway started crying because they were scared, which was pitiful, but I also felt a sense of accomplishment.
I drew the thread image, and for the cultural festival, the regular characters will have a story where their comedy routine flops.
Actually, there were students who skipped school because the main character’s class project was canceled due to a controversy.
>>47
Now that you mention it, that’s really terrible…
Because I was in the student council, I arranged everything for the after-party and such.
I helped with both the club activities and the class presentation, and on the side, I created the student council’s club magazine.
I did some stand-up comedy and got a bit of a laugh.
When we were doing something in class, we did it properly.
When there was nothing to do, I would just lounge around in the classroom.
I was just waiting for time to pass in a cold and damp place, escaping everything during the preparation and on the day itself.
I wrote the script for the play we will perform in class.
I won an award for my grade, but the one who got thrown in the air was the lead, and I wasn’t even called.
The boys organized a whack-a-mole event where someone played the role of the mole, and I was happy that it turned out to be more successful than expected and made a profit.
I had poor grades and had to take remedial classes → I was hit with a deadly combo of being marked absent because the cultural festival is considered a credit as well.
I was really enthusiastic and obsessed with that kind of event, and it became annoying to others.
In Sket Dance, they properly depicted a fun cultural festival…
Because the project I wanted to present at the school festival lost the vote and didn’t get approved.
I lost my motivation and hardly helped.
It’s a rare case that only happens to someone who is really useless, as groups can form among those who don’t take preparation seriously.
During my first and second year of high school, I was really enthusiastic, but when I was told to do events in my third year, I was too focused on college entrance exams, so I took the opportunity to study in an empty classroom.
I have no memory.
I used to enjoy things normally, but when the class T-shirts were handed out, I really thought, “Wow, this kind of thing actually exists…”
Are you talking about a manga like SKET DANCE?
High school was just okay, but I really worked hard in university.
I said I would do the work, but I was told there’s none, so it’s fine.
I came back.
Basically, since participation was voluntary, the sports festival turned into a chaotic event where all grades randomly participated in the tug-of-war.
>>67
That sounds fun in its own way.
I won’t go to the center or anything like that.
I didn’t particularly slack off or mock those who were trying hard.
I worked really hard on the preparation.
The entire thing was taken by the first team members who only worked that day.
I was frustrated, so I was slacking off at the arcade.
Because I was a contrarian, I was more enthusiastic during the years when the whole class lacked motivation.
I was working hard on both the class performance and the committee duties.
Since there were hardly any events like this at school, I still wonder if they really exist; the only thing was the sports day in elementary school at most…
>>73
What kind of school is it…?
I worked hard on the class presentation, but for everything else, I just watched.
After putting in an outrageous amount of effort into preparation, I ended up standing out too much in the areas I was in charge of, so I decided to approach it more moderately.
I just made and sold shaved ice with the ice shaver I had at home, so there was no preparation at all.
I was watching and laughing as the haunted house in the neighboring class, which I thought would definitely cause trouble, was indeed causing trouble.
Since there were no cultural festivals in both middle and high school, I really don’t know what kind of event it is.
As expected, it’s full of 5th army episodes…
>>80
Isn’t it the other way around?
I’m surprised to see some responses from those who were just enjoying normally.
>>82
Because I can only see what I want to see.
Our high school doesn’t have a culture festival, but we had an event with only a mock store.
It was really busy because a lot of customers came, but it was fun.
I did many things, but the most fun was when I joined the executive committee.
Does that mean that without the culture festival, we should focus more on studying?
>>84
It’s the kind of thing that’s common in so-called “prestigious schools”…
It was a culture festival where I did not participate at all and just played mahjong in the club room.
Well, it really depends on the atmosphere of the class when it comes to things like this.
No matter what, when we decided to do this, I remember everyone working hard without slacking off.
I wonder if it’s because it was an all-boys school.
The mysterious prejudice that otaku girls must be good at drawing because they are otaku, and painting signs with them has become quite a memorable experience.
>>90
Awesome! It looks like erotic doujinshi from FANZA!
The preparation phase was probably the most fun.
Since I had club duties during the event, I couldn’t really look around much.
When I was in high school, there were about 100 members in the cultural festival executive committee, and we were having fun with the festival atmosphere while being on the organizing side.
I didn’t skip work or gossip behind anyone’s back, but whenever I got involved, there was a certain atmosphere, and basically, I was just a gopher…
You suddenly disappeared.
It’s called a so-called “advancing school,” but since we had a cultural festival, it’s likely that a really strict advancing school wouldn’t have one.
>>95
I graduated from a top-ranking high school in the country, but it was just ordinary…
I wasn’t in the art club and couldn’t draw, but I was ridiculously favored by the art teacher, so I was made to help with the exhibition on the day.
I was looked at with faces that seemed to say, “Who is this person?” by the art club members.
I was asked by the student council to paint a sign to put by the gate.
I drew alone in an empty classroom after school, so there was no fun and laughter.
I was entrusted with support flags because I was marketed as a character good at drawing.
Looking back now, there were several people who were actually better than me.
Serious schools generally have proper cultural festivals.
The lack of a cultural festival is because it’s a school that gathers people who couldn’t get into that prestigious school and tries to tackle studying with sheer volume.
I left without preparation, but it wasn’t noticed that I was gone.
I feel like in serious prep schools, there were quite a few people who enjoyed that kind of thing while also going to good universities.
We had a cultural festival and a sports festival, but we didn’t have a shoe cabinet at our school.
By the way, did the school have a shoe locker?
I never had it in junior high or high school.
>>104
I hear that some schools in a certain prefecture or city don’t use indoor shoes, so they don’t have shoe lockers.
>>104
Although it was small, I changed shoes in front of the classroom locker during middle and high school.
I heard that the neighboring high school has a lot of restrictions for their cultural festival, which makes it boring.
>>105
We also had a noisy food-related event where we did something trivial like balloon fishing…
I skipped the class presentation, but I really worked hard on the club presentation.
It’s a so-called prestigious school, but they had a cultural festival like any other.
Isn’t it rare not to do it?
I prepared hard until the day, but I had no friends that day, so I ended up wasting time in the library.
The fact that it’s present in both self-proclaimed and prestigious schools means that it doesn’t exist in some sort of special school.
That is really a good event where one can become aware of the first, second, and third teams.
>>112
Rather, it seems I can make more proposals than I thought… and I realized that the caste I had assumed actually didn’t exist.
Gorillas can say it, right?
Since I work as the scare actor in a haunted house, preparation has been easy for me.
Every time I see it, the second panel’s servile and cynical expression is exceptionally brilliant.
I couldn’t work on the class presentation because of the club’s exhibition preparations.
As a result of my efforts, I ended up fracturing my leg.
These things are fun if you’re in the core group, but if not, they are really boring.
Rather than the nature of humanity, it changes depending on the year.
>>119
Even just playing with my usual friends at the edge is pretty fun, but not really.
I have memories of properly running a store during the years we did it in class, but during the years when there was no work, I slacked off in the club room and played games, which got me in trouble.
Haunted houses, maid cafés, and manga are all classics.
The former is one thing, but does the latter even exist…?
I feel like there wasn’t any kind of caste system because it was a complete rural area.
It’s likely that I was just insensitive.