Yuusha Ni Minna Netoraretakedo Akiramezu Ni Tatakao Kitto Saigo Wa Ore Ga Katsu Raw 【Recommended】

The title is very literal. The protagonist is a side character (often an ordinary adventurer or childhood friend) whose entire female party (or love interests) are systematically stolen by the “Hero” — a charming, blessed, and morally questionable archetype. Unlike many NTR stories where the protagonist crumbles, this MC declares: “I won’t give up. I’ll fight. Surely I’ll win in the end.”

The core hook of the series is found right in the title: Akiramezu ni Tatakao (Fight without giving up).

“You never had any talent,” the hero said, arm around my fiancée. She didn’t even look at me. I smiled. “Maybe. But talent doesn’t make you immune to poison in your wine. Or the merchant guild turning against you. Or the king learning about your affair with his daughter.” The hero’s face paled. I whispered, “I didn’t give up. I just waited.” The title is very literal

Yuuya is a "Fake Hero" who uses mental manipulation rather than pure strength to take what he wants.

The story follows , a commoner whose life is ruined by Yuuya , a summoned hero from another world. Yuuya uses his status and charms to steal away the women close to Ark—his stepsister Laura, childhood friends Shao and Fanon, and a neighbor named Fiore—after they awaken to legendary skills while Ark receives the seemingly weak "Shining Shield" skill. Plot Progression & Key Characters I’ll fight

"You fight with despair," a raspy voice said. It was an old woman, her eyes clouded with cataracts. "You seek to kill a god, do you not?"

Readers are initially drawn in by the visceral anger elicited by the betrayal. The Hero is often portrayed as arrogant and entitled, while the party members who left are portrayed as fickle or manipulated. This sets up a delicious narrative promise: the inevitable takedown. The audience reads on not just to see the protagonist succeed, but to see the Hero fail. She didn’t even look at me

I looked at them. The women I had loved, the women who had betrayed me under a spell. The anger was there, a cold lump in my chest. But so was the relief.

It serves as a stark contrast to the "Beta Male" trope often seen in harem comedies. Here, the protagonist is forced to become "Alpha" not by dominating others, but by conquering his own weakness and refusing to yield to despair.