@jdexo1 A woman can be that tall and strong without being an oiled, androgynous bodybuilder. MC should have some muscle definition under those dresses though, should we ever get to see it.
But really though, why are people far more ready to suspend their immersion in a story when a female character has prime protagonist characteristics like strength and fighting ability?
Are women only breasts and a pretty face, even in fiction where all people can be anything?
Ok lets contextualize this - she was stronger than an adult male when she was 10 years old. That's fantasy, superhuman strength. Strength and fighting ability, fine, but why does it need to be stated that she is so ridiculously strong? It just seems like a superficial addition to the character, like I stated in my other comment. If she was out fighting battles then it might be relevant to make her so strong, but it doesn't seem like that's going to be the case.
This isn't a 1:1 comparison, but if this was a narrative about a nobleman who had that level of strength but never meaningfully used it, it'd feel superficial as well.
As for your last statement and your other comment, people like beautiful people, be they man or woman. Many people here are even commenting on how strange it is for the ML to be "ugly" despite the fact that he's not ugly at all, he's shredded to all hell and has a chiseled face, he's just got a scar. In fiction you can choose to make a character beautiful, so why wouldn't you?
Irl, beauty is certainly more of a standard when it comes to women in media. Vtubing has become an option for content creators, so there's that at least, but I don't see the societal perspective itself ever changing. Just an unfortunate reality.
In terms of the trope of a character having little to no characterization/personality outside of their appearance, I think you see that in shojo pretty damn often for MLs. Harems, reverse harems, it's all bad, really. It's a more common trope for women for sure, but it's not the whole picture. Seems that men use the trope for women and women use the trope for men.
Sorry for rambling in response to an old comment, just thought it would be important enough to put it out there.