Not for me. I understand that others may relate to the characters more based on their own identities, but I found the premise silly and the characters' willingness to go along with the presence even sillier. We barely meet Akira before their sex-change disease, and even after that I have no sense of their personality aside from "maybe this disease wasn't a bad thing after all...".
The art really is really rough and I almost dropped the entire volume at the third panel. It improves a lot throug
Absolutely beautiful art. It is worth reading just to see the intricate and gorgeous panels that appear sporadically, and the art throughout is solid as well.
Unfortunately, in my opinion, it doesn't have much else going for it. The writing seems more focused on world-building and explaining the magic system than on the characters and their interactions. If you're someone who prefers hard magic systems and a lot of world-building, this may be the manga for you. For me, I could have gone without
I liked this collection marginally better than コンビニ人間, probably because the individual stories did not overstay their welcome.
While there were stories I enjoyed more than others (and a few I didn't think much of at all), mostly I just did not find them all that interesting. The protagonists largely feel the same, and the stories don't go anywhere too innovative or weird.