Wow, so funny, the guy in
Musaigen no Phantom World got seriously beaten up by the girls multiple times in a row just for trying to be helpful. It's extra humorous because the best survey data from the real world suggests that completely one-sided domestic violence is actually
more common when the victim is male than female.
Touche anime writers, you really got us there, lol.*
* let's keep the discussion within anime however.
Musaigen no Phantom World lampshaded it's first anime cliche - guy gets face planted in girl's crotch, but they haven't even bothered to do that any more. In episode one they try and make the guy look genre-savvy. But he's now a generic victim of anime hijinks and there's no self-awareness. I makes me like all the characters involved much less:
rather than ask him to leave a room, the girls physically assaulted him and threw him through a closed door so hard his head collided loudly with the far wall. This was because the girls instantly decided they needed him outside the room, and rather than using "words" they immediately went for extreme physical violence as the way to get someone to go outside. This is actually worse than Zero Louise or Love Hina or To Love Ru violence. Nothing happened or was misunderstood, they just treated him as someone who it was ok to assault because it saved the trouble of just asking them to do something.
Then he repeatedly hears them in trouble in the room, and opens the door multiple times. Each of those times he gets physically thrown out of a second-story window and only survives because by an off-chance there is an awning underneath that specific window. After the second time one of the girls says "sorry i lost control" (but the thing she lost control over was her fault anyway) and this immediately absolves her of attempted murder.
After that, the girls put him on the spot "well? Why haven't you fixed this problem yet?", and more 100% random physical assaults accompany his attempts to please the girls. But all of this follows an entire episode where the girls were writing off his skills entirely, either ignoring him when discussing who is skilled or actively pointing out how he is not needed. It is the exact sort of belittling you see in domestic abuse. Well, after the incident is over one of the girls is extra-nice to him to "make it up", so it's not abuse right? Wrong, that's the exact pattern that abuse victims say goes on. The abuser alternates abuse with "making it up" to keep the victim from leaving them.
It really makes me hate all of these characters.