Just read It Is Not My Fault That I Am Not Popular and was quite pleasantly surprised.
It is a Slice of Life comedy about a girl, Tomoko, who is seemingly unable to function in a social context.
So most of the manga plays inside of her head in monologues mostly about her fears her insecurities and her general misanthropy but sometimes the action spills into the outside world.
Kinda like spaghetti from sleeves. Seriously the spaghetti in this manga is indescribable.
Anything I could write would just not be adequate.
However most of these awkward situations are set in a humorous context doubly so as Tomoko is kind of an huge asshole (I totally loved her habit of killing ants as a touch of her character. It is quite overblown but totally works somehow. Also she doesn't even manage to kill any insects "on screen" IIRC.)
So most of the laughs are had at her expense but I think sometimes the manga deliberately crosses a line and forces/allows the reader to pity her.
I also think that it is not just entirely for pandering reasons that the main character is a girl.
Firstly Tomoko has absorbed a lot of nerd culture quite uncritically and thus ends up being a (unfortunately not so rare) female misogynist, which plays into her self-loathing and her relationship with others. She calls her best and only friend, who cares more for her than she deserves, a bitch (in her head of course, where she refers to most other girls as bitches) while she also clearly enjoys the self gratification of not being one.
Secondly I do not think that the manga fetishizes her a lot, but as Ultimadrago said maybe there is a gap between me and the target audience. However the art, while being kinda simplistic, goes out of its way in order to show her unkempt, unwashed and unclean state.
And lastly in some chapters the manga shows surprising amounts of awareness of feminist issues and thinking.