Mr Love: Queen's Choice
Finished · 12 epMAPPA · 2020 · Japan

Mr Love: Queen's Choice

恋とプロデューサー~EVOL×LOVE~

5.9/ 10 · 20,968

Available on

Crunchyroll· Sub · HD

Based on Papergames' otome dating simulation game. The heroine has inherited a company from her late father and is now in charge of a television program as its producer. However, the company is on the brink of bankruptcy due to the lack of capital. While trying to save her father's once popular program and company, she meets four potential "boyfriends." However, before she knew it, she is caught in a huge conspiracy over special powers known as "Evol." (Source: Anime News Network)

Episodes

12
1. Episode 1 - The Beginning Bonds
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
2. Episode 2 - When the Wind Blows
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
3. Episode 3 - A Taste of Reminiscence
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
4. Episode 4 - The Key in the Darkness
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
5. Episode 5 - An Amber Wind
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
6. Episode 6 - Beyond That Dream
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
7. Episode 7 - Connected Memories
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
8. Episode 8 - Room 404
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
9. Episode 9 - Monochrome
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
10. Episode 10 - Dawn of Farewell
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
11. Episode 11 - At the Edge of the Coming Time
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
12. Episode 12 - Bonds
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch

How watching this pays the artists

Every time you watch Mr Love: Queen's Choice on a legitimate streaming service, a portion of that revenue flows back to MAPPA, the voice actors, the composer, and the animators who made it. Subscribing or watching on an ad-supported tier is how the work continues.

Where the money actually goes

Streaming services pay licensing fees to the production committee that financed the show. That committee distributes revenue to the studio, the publisher of the source material, the music label, and the broadcasters who originally aired it. The animators themselves are typically employed or contracted by the studio; their pay comes from the studio’s share of these licensing dollars.

Piracy doesn’t reduce streaming-service revenue evenly — it removes the underlying viewership that justifies future licensing investment. Less licensing investment means smaller studio budgets, lower pay for animators, and fewer shows greenlit.

Torinagi surfaces every legitimate option so you can watch on the service you already pay for, or on a free ad-supported tier if one carries this show. We never host video.