Reviewed by Kana
Who it's for, and whether it holds up.
The setup is simple: a guy anonymously helps two beautiful sisters who hate men, and they fall for him before they know who he is. There's real comic potential in the secret-identity angle, and the hint of heavier themes, loneliness, the death of loved ones, suggests the author might be going for something with a bit more weight than the typical harem comedy.
Whether it delivers on that potential is where things get uncertain. The main criticism from readers is that the male protagonist is too passive, too dense. He reportedly keeps rejecting or ignoring advances even when the interest from the sisters is obvious, which drags out a romantic development that already has a natural built-in delay from the secret-identity premise. When denseness is the primary engine keeping the plot going, it tends to wear thin.
At 3.2 this is solidly in the "decent but not essential" range. The core setup is likable enough, and if you have a high tolerance for slow-burn harem dynamics and a hesitant male lead, there's probably enjoyment here. But the novel doesn't seem to fully use what makes its premise interesting. If you want the man-hating-sisters angle with more comedic payoff or a protagonist who actually engages with the situation, it might leave you waiting.