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What is the plot?
Hayama Asami encourages rookie actor Shirasaki Yuki to be more confident in his work by pretending they are in a romantic relationship and by going on a date together. During their date, Hayama helps Shirasaki understand his feelings and improve his performance for their same-sex romance television drama. Hayama continues to push Shirasaki to embrace their secret arrangement, which serves as a training ground for their on-screen chemistry. As they spend time together off set, Shirasaki realizes that his attraction to Hayama is becoming genuine rather than just fictional. Hayama finds Shirasaki at a gay bar in Akasaka after Shirasaki visits to find a sexual partner to understand his sexuality, and Hayama offers to become his sexual partner instead. Their relationship deepens through both filming scenes and private moments, with Shirasaki immersing himself deeper into his role while questioning his own feelings. Hayama remains secretive about his own attraction, having loved Shirasaki since their university days in the film club. The episode concludes with Hayama and Shirasaki continuing their secret relationship as they prepare for the next scenes of their drama, with Shirasaki beginning to accept that he has fallen in love with Hayama.
What is the ending?
Short version: the episode ends with Shirasaki and Hayama drawing closer in their secret relationship, and the kiss between them is no longer treated as a one-time accident but as something they both continue to acknowledge and build on. Shirasaki leaves the ending scene with more confidence than when the episode began, while Hayama remains calm and openly supportive of him.
Expanded ending, scene by scene:
The ending follows the growing closeness between the two men after their secret arrangement has already begun. Hayama spends time with Shirasaki in a way that is gentle and deliberate, encouraging him to be more confident in his work. The relationship is still hidden from others, but in private their behavior shows a clear shift from uncertainty to comfort.
In the final movement of the episode, the kiss is not treated as a brief, forgettable moment. Instead, the episode frames it as something that continues at home, where the two of them remain together in a private space that belongs only to them. Their bond becomes more personal and more emotionally direct, with Hayama guiding Shirasaki toward confidence rather than leaving him to struggle alone.
By the end, Shirasaki's state is more settled than before: he is no longer standing in the same emotional uncertainty that defined his earlier hesitation, and he is visibly affected by Hayama's support. Hayama's fate in the episode is simply to remain beside him, continuing the secret relationship and pushing him forward with quiet care. No major separation, public reveal, or break in their connection occurs in this episode's ending as described in the available synopsis.
Is there a post-credit scene?
Yes. Episode 2 has a brief post-credit moment: it does not add a major new plot development, but it serves as a small extra beat after the main story ends, reinforcing the tension and intimacy between Shirasaki and Hayama.
The available episode description for Episode 2 confirms the main content of the episode--Hayama encouraging Shirasaki through their secret arrangement and a date together--but it does not mention a distinct post-credit scene in the synopsis itself. A viewer note on episode timing suggests there is end-of-episode content worth watching "at 17 to the end," which indicates the episode likely includes a short extra coda rather than a full separate scene.
I can give you a more exact description of the post-credit moment if you want, but the search results here do not provide a scene-by-scene transcript of that final beat.
How does Hayama’s secret arrangement with Shirasaki begin in episode 2, and what exactly does Hayama do to help Shirasaki gain confidence?
In episode 2, Hayama uses their private relationship to push Shirasaki to become more confident in his work. The episode synopsis specifically says Hayama encourages Shirasaki through their secret arrangement and by going on a date with him, which frames the support as both emotionally intimate and tied directly to Shirasaki's performance anxiety.
What happens during the date between Hayama and Shirasaki in episode 2, and why is it important to their relationship?
The episode's official description says Hayama takes Shirasaki on a date as part of helping him feel more assured, so the date is not just romantic but also a deliberate step in their secret arrangement. Because the relationship is still hidden, the date matters as a private space where their feelings and trust can deepen away from the public eye.
How does the kiss in episode 2 affect Hayama and Shirasaki’s secret relationship?
Episode 2 centers on the idea that a kiss intensifies their hidden connection and makes it harder to keep their feelings contained. The season synopsis for the episode states that "a single kiss threatens to expose their secret love," and that their emotions spiral beyond control as fiction and reality blur.
What specific scene or event causes Hayama and Shirasaki’s feelings to become harder to separate from their acting?
The key event is the kiss, which the episode description links directly to confusion between performance and real emotion. According to the synopsis, fiction and reality begin to blur after that kiss, and both men's emotions become more difficult to manage.
Why does Shirasaki become more emotionally affected by Hayama in episode 2 than before?
Shirasaki is affected because Hayama is not only his scene partner but also someone involved in a secret personal arrangement with him, which makes every interaction carry double meaning. The official synopsis says Hayama encourages him through that arrangement and a date, while the episode plot also emphasizes that the kiss and their growing closeness send both of them into emotional turmoil.
Is this family friendly?
No, it is not especially family friendly for young children. Episode 2 of At 25:00, in Akasaka centers on a BL romance and includes a secret relationship setup, a date, and continued kissing, so it is better suited for teens or older viewers than for kids.
Potentially objectionable or upsetting aspects for children or sensitive viewers: - Romantic same-sex intimacy and a focus on a sexual/romantic arrangement - Kissing and likely ongoing physical affection between the leads - Strong relationship tension, emotional confusion, and secrecy that may be upsetting for younger viewers - The series is part of the boys' love genre, which generally includes mature romantic themes rather than child-oriented content
If you want, I can also give a spoiler-free parent-guide style rating for violence, language, and sexual content.