Ghosts and Tiddies
Part comedy, part existential horror, Mieruko-chan (The Girl Who Sees Them) is about a girl that can see otherworldly terrors. There is some fanservice in the manga, but it goes by very quickly. The anime, however, expands on these scenes. The reason is quite obvious: to fill time. That doesn’t stop us from getting a peak bath scene in episode four, however.
Most of these scenes tend to be heavy on dialogue while one panel is used to show the three main girls, Miko, Hana, and Yulia in various states of undress or in swimsuits. Normally I don’t think comedy and horror and fanservice mix very well, but Mieruko-chan is one of those exceptions. The production quality is also top notch. Most horror manga tend to have very good aesthetic for the monsters in the manga, but then look like absolute ass in the anime adaptation.
On the other hand the fanservice starts off heavy in every arc, but fades away as the show/manga becomes more story heavy in helping those that are afflicted by the supernatural terrors, and as much as I would like a second season as there’s a fourth girl that this adaptation doesn’t even show, and in the manga she gets lewded as well, despite the fact that it largely moves away from fanservice.