-manga Kuroiwa Medaka Ni Watashi No Kawaii Ga Tsuujinai Chapter 170- Portable [ High Speed ]

In the vibrant landscape of romantic comedy manga, few series have mastered the art of "misunderstanding" quite like Kuroiwa Medaka ni Watashi no Kawaii ga Tsuujinai (My Cuteness Isn't Understood by Kuroiwa Medaka). For nearly 200 chapters, readers have watched the relentless crusade of Mona Kawai, the school’s reigning "queen of cuteness," as she attempted to pierce the stoic heart of the aloof Osananajimi, Medaka Kuroiwa.

The heart of Chapter 170 is the Sports Day competition, specifically the bread-eating race where Mona and Medaka are paired together. In the vibrant landscape of romantic comedy manga,

In the bustling ecosystem of Weekly Shonen Magazine rom-coms, few series have mastered the art of the "slow burn with a sting" quite like Kuroiwa Medaka ni Watashi no Kawaii ga Tsuujinai (commonly known as Medaka Kuroiwa is Impervious to My Charms ). Written and illustrated by Ran Kuze, the manga has consistently delivered a delicate balance of visual gags, high-stakes emotional denial, and genuine character growth. In the bustling ecosystem of Weekly Shonen Magazine

However, Medaka is not merely stoic; he is oblivious to a fault. Throughout the series, he has viewed Mona’s advances through a lens of suspicion or sheer denseness, treating her aggressive flirting as mere eccentricity or, at times, even a bother. For over 150 chapters, the comedy relied on this friction: Mona plotting a "cute attack," executing it perfectly, only for Medaka to remain unphased or misinterpret the situation entirely. Throughout the series, he has viewed Mona’s advances

As the series moves past its 170th chapter, several key plot points remain central to the narrative:

Mona remains elusive, refusing to give Karin a straight answer about her feelings, though her actions during the race clearly show her continued devotion to Medaka.

For 170 chapters, Mona has been the aggressor. But the strongest rom-coms reverse the dynamic.