I'm not super in love with this, but there is one thing I like about how the author chose to frame it.
Namely, the choice to make the title super-explicit about the genre and its ultimate conclusion, and then using that to free themselves to practice proper show-it-don't-say-it storytelling (but without any will-they-won't-they ambiguity) for the first several chapters.
With one girl shown clearly going through struggling with her feelings, but without the usual soliloquies or asides that would normally be used to make it explicit, it feels way more nuanced and natural than the usual hammer-over-the-head approach that manga tends to take.