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Does It Count If You Lose Your Innocence to an Android? · review

★
Top reader Mar 1, 2026 · 2 min read
↑ Recommended
8 /10

If you're looking for a blend of science fiction, romantic comedy, and that classic existential question about "what defines a human being," Android wa Keiken Ninzuu ni Hairimasu ka (or Does an Android Count as a Sexual Partner?) is a work that delivers more than the suggestive title might suggest at first glance. The Premise The story revolves around Tamaki, a young man living an ordinary life until his father, an eccentric inventor, sends him an unusual gift: a state-of-the-art android designed to be the perfect partner. The central conflict—and the comic relief—arises from the fact that the android is programmed to satisfy all of Tamaki's needs, whileTamaki tries to maintain his sanity and morality in the face of a machine that understands no social boundaries but understands everything about anatomy and pleasure.

Strengths
Tone Balance: Despite heavily flirting with the ecchi genre and having spicy moments, the work shines in its comedy. The contrast between the android's cold, direct logic and Tamaki's human despair creates genuinely funny situations.
Art: The character design is clean and expressive. The author manages to convey the android's "artificial perfection" very well, which makes the visual dynamic between the protagonists quite interesting.
Underlying Questions: Amidst the jokes, the manga touches on real wounds: if an AI can perfectly simulate love and pleasure, does that negate the human experience? The title is not just a joke; it's the protagonist's central dilemma.

What might put some readers off
Fan Service: If you prefer purely platonic stories or stories without sexual appeal, this manga might be a bit excessive. It's not shy about its suggestive nature.
Pacting: Like many niche romantic comedies, the development of the main plot sometimes slows down in favor of episodic "chaos of the day" chapters.

Verdict
Is it worth it? If you enjoy titles like Chobits (but with a much more modern and explicit approach) or are looking for a light read that mixes clumsy romance with technology, the answer is yes. It's a fun book that knows exactly what it is and doesn't try to be too pretentious.
Quick note: The title plays on the idea of ​​"counting partners," suggesting that, in the age of AI, the definitions of relationships are about to get a lot more complicated.

Mark
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