| Storyline | Chemistry | Realism | Emotional Payoff | |-----------|-----------|---------|------------------| | Pappu + Tina (crush) | ❌ Weak | ✅ High (awkward flirting) | ❌ None (fizzles out) | | Pappu + Bubbly (friends to ???) | ✅ Cute | ⚠️ Mixed | ✅ Sweet ending | | Monty + Tina (jealousy plot) | ❌ Forced | ❌ Low | ❌ Clichéd |
Best romantic moment: Pappu sharing his tiffin with Bubbly when she forgets hers — small, kind, genuine.
Worst moment: The “love letter falls into wrong hands” trope — overused and lazy.
Every Pappu storyline requires a thunderstorm. It comes in the form of The Canteen Incident.
Pappu finally saves his lunch money for a week to buy two samosas—one for him, one for Riya. He approaches her in the canteen. As he is about to present the greasy peace offering, Banta shouts, “Oye Pappu! Dono samosa usko de raha hai? Tera toh ho gaya!” schoolgirl sex at school pappu mobi 3gp full
Riya’s face turns crimson. She says the seven words that destroy Pappu: “I don’t like you. Stop following me.”
Pappu is crushed. He spends the next two days listening to Arijit Singh songs on a broken MP3 player. He writes a sad poem: “Love is like a pencil / It writes then erases / My heart is the eraser dust / On the floor of classes.”
This is the most important phase of the romantic storyline because it teaches Pappu the first real lesson of love: rejection does not kill you. It just makes you eat your samosas alone for a week. | Storyline | Chemistry | Realism | Emotional
The story follows Pappu, a stereotypically average, slightly goofy schoolboy, as he navigates crushes, friendship drama, and “romantic storylines” with classmates like Tina, Rinku, and Bubbly. The arcs include:
What works: Captures the awkward, innocent energy of school crushes.
What doesn’t: Plots are predictable, often resolved too conveniently (e.g., “Sorry, let’s be friends again” within one page).
At School: Pappu Relationships and Romantic Storylines is a harmless, mildly entertaining attempt at school romance. It succeeds in evoking nostalgia for simple crushes but fails to rise above clichés. Pappu remains a lovable fool, but the story never asks — or answers — what he or his crushes actually learn about love. Every Pappu storyline requires a thunderstorm
Recommended only if: You want a quick, laughable, low-investment read between heavier content. Otherwise, skip for better school romance comics like Golu & Pappu or Chacha Chaudhary’s teen spin-offs.
Would you like a side-by-side comparison with similar school romance series? Or a rewrite of one storyline with better character development?