Science Fell in Love, So I Tried to Prove It Season 2 To Premiere Early!

Published on March 30, 2022
Written by:
Samona Punjabi
Samona Punjabi
Anime News & Guide Writer

The new season of Science Fell in Love, So I Tried to Prove It is set for a Spring 2022 release. According to the latest update, viewers will be able to watch the first episode of the series a little early than the usual broadcast timing. The anime's second season is titled Science Fell in Love, So I Tried to Prove It r=1-sinθ.

Science Fell in Love, So I Tried To Prove It is originally a Japanese romantic comedy manga series by Alifred Yamamoto. It has been serialized online via Flex Comix's Comic Meteor website since 2016 and has been collected in eight tankobon volumes. The series also received a four-episode live-action drama adaptation in September 2018 and a live-action film adaptation in 2019. Read on to know more about the Science Fell in Love season 2 release date and time.

Science Fell in Love Season 2 Release Date, Time, and More

According to Crunchyroll's latest update, the new season of Science Fell in Love, So I Tried to Prove It, will release on April 1, 2022. The series is slated to go live at 4 AM Pacific Time, which is sooner than the usual broadcast time, meaning fans can catch the first episode of the series early! The popular romantic comedy series will release on Crunchyroll in North America, Central America, South America, Europe, Africa, Oceania, the Middle East, and CIS.

The first season of the Science Fell in Love, So I Tried to Prove It anime series was aired for 12 episodes from January to March 2020. All episodes are available in sub and dub on Crunchyroll to its members worldwide, excluding Asia. Crunchyroll's official description for the Science Fell in Love series reads:

"What happens when a science-inclined girl and boy who are deeply passionate about research fall in love? An intelligent woman named Himuro Ayame who is a science graduate student at Saitama University happens to ask fellow science grad student Yukimura Shinya out. Of course, there's no logical reason for this love! But as a science and engineering major, not being able to logically prove love would mean that those feelings aren't real, and they'd fail as a science student. With that in mind, the two drag everyone else in the lab into trying various experiments to prove love actually exists."

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