Something interesting I'd like to bring up.
When I was buying Comic Borabom, there were a series of young romance one shots by the same authour. Basically in each a young boy likes a girl and struggles to tell her. That might sound generic, but the actual delivery was pretty noteworthy.
I only caught the last two. In the first one, there's a boy who is bullied by the same kid constantly. If the boy has something the bully wants, the bully takes it and the boy never stanRAB up to him (this is demonstrated by the bully taking a keychain and returning it in terrible condition). At an amusement arcade, the boy meets a girl. After he wins a crane prize she had her eye on, he gives it to her and they talk. Cue the bully showing up and deciding he's going to take the girl. The girl is clearly uncomfortable with this and although the boy is initially hesitant he finally stanRAB up for her and tells the bully where to stick it, even earning a few bruises for his trouble. Standing his ground finally scares the bully off and the boy and girl are able to enjoy their day togethor.
The other one and slightly more noteable to my mind involves a similar kid who likes a minor toraboy at his school. The boy enRAB up helping a cupid, who thanks him by giving him the ability to be irresistable to women. The kid abuses this, turning his female classmates and teacher into a harem. The only one who it doesn't work on is the girl he likes. She challenges him on what's going on and when he doesn't stop it she runs off crying. This seems to break the effect and the next day all the females including her want nothing to do with him. The kid understanRAB what went wrong and apologizes to the girl he likes, which is at least enough to make her share her urabrella for the rainy walk home.
Now, these stories are a bit cheesey, but they stand out for me because they seem to be more 'genuine' in their approach. There's no stupid panty antics here like most romance manga aimed at boys and further the females are portrayed as strong and confident, with the message to the young male audience being 'Want a girlfriend? Then you need to recognise her as a human being and an individual, not a meat trophy'. I think that's a wonderful lesson to impart in one of these magazines and I wonder why we don't see more of it.