Eeeeeh I am 90% sure I left a comment here a year ago, but I guess that was one of the ones that got rolled back when MD updated the servers way back when. It was just too tragic that a webtoon that made such a huge impact on me as a kid's only comment was one made by the site's most blocked user.
Anyways, I'm going to try to remember that review the best I can.
Despite its comedic tone and casual style, this goes over some heavy issues. A decade later, many of them are still relevant. Fortunately, some have become more common knowledge, like how now, it is much more common to frown on people who are overtly violently homophobic, no matter what the others' stances are.
The MC starts as someone like a lot of people back then-- uncomfortable by people who like the same sex, but out of ignorance and prejudice rather than for some specific reason. And as flimsy as that reasoning seems to be, it is something many homophobic readers may relate to, and hopefully learn from. I sure did, back when I was a child who didn't know much about the world that didn't directly impact me. So because it assumes the source of hate is ignorance, this manhua doesn't attack people for being homophobic, and instead focuses on trying to show that people are just people. Of course, this won't help if the reader is violently homophobic because they are inherently an irredeemable asshole, but they probably won't be reading more than a few chapters of this anyways.
With the influx of stories that go over this kind of subject, and even more with homosexual characters treated as humans rather than jokes (boy what a low bar), this one won't seem as influential to a person, but it is still worth a read, especially if you are someone who is on the fence about same sex relationships and gender identity.
But other than that major theme, it's also pretty funny with good characters and character development. You really start to feel for them after a while, even the annoying MC.