Do It Yourself!!
I guess it's a bit of a shame that Do It Yourself!! had to share a season with Bocchi, but maybe I'm only saying this because it's a thing people are saying. Being arguably the less ambitious of the two shows doesn't mean DIY isn't quite a good version of what it is.
Premise: intrepid teens aspire to do it themselves. One somewhat more trepid teen harbors a furious crush on her childhood friend and copes by acting like a tech industry girlboss, setting herself up for an unfulfilling, lonely, and brief corporate career that will end in total burnout and lasting regret.
That Purin casually participates in the opening, though, lets us know that it'll probably be okay. Much as the healing label is reductive and risks sanding down the rougher edges that otherwise make shows like this stand out (I say, as someone whose favorite anime/manga are heavily represented on that Wikipedia page), it seems to apply here.
Honestly I prefer the general moment-to-moment aesthetic of this show over that of BTR. This isn't a criticism of the latter, which often deviates from the norm and so benefits from having a norm that doesn't pop so much. But as far as decisions about color use, how to render characters, etc., I find DIY just very pleasant to look at. The daydream sequences aren't that much of a leap from how everything looks normally; this very much is Serufu's world at all times.
It's also a world that gestures at a near future, but in a way that's mostly background ambience (aside from how it manifests in otherwise non-edgy 15-year-olds having opinions about the technological singularity for some reason). A less carefully considered show would've used the setting to deliver a totally perfunctory message about how hammering a nail is better and more human than using a 3D printer, but this is a world in which the two things can coexist, and indeed one person can do both. When this is addressed directly, the point made is just, the existence of carbon nanotube fibers or whatever doesn't mean it isn't still fun to do carpentry or handicrafts. In the few cases when characters insist that building a chair out of wood is old man shit, it's clearly an expression of other issues and not a serious argument DIY feels the need to engage with. Which is good, since it'd be pretty easy to miss the mark and land in "embrace tradition" territory. While the resulting attitude isn't exactly an endorsement of seizing the means of production--basically an entire third of the cast are scions of business empires--it's at least better than what you'd get from a fascist Twitter bot.
In any case, that's all secondary to what DIY is really trying to do, which is be one of those shows about a friend group coming together and then navigating a difficult but relatively low-stakes situation. As with Purin, you're never really worried that any of these kids will grow up to be embittered jerks or union-busting managers. When necessary, each character works on sorting their stuff out by making common cause with the one or two others with similar hangups. It's just a comprehensively warmhearted few hours of TV, and while I can't really imagine a second season, I don't know that it'd benefit from belaboring the point and don't think everything needs to be a thousand hours long anyway. Though if there were more, I'd probably watch it.