Definitely.
Before I joined this forum I was still somewhat bluepilled.
I had an understanding that looks are important but I thought that by being morally virtuous along with gymmaxxing and being muscular I can attract women.
I didn't knew height was important, only face and physique for the most part. I figured that if being in a romantic relationship was a good thing, why would a woman who's single reject my proposal to date her if she also wants companionship? If I was nice and morally virtuous like not being one of the bad guys, caring about animals, not drinking and smoking and partying, being a more reserved person, not being a misogynist, not just using her for sex, and treating my girlfriend as an equal then I should be a good boyfriend for a girl.
I pretty much thought that every guy had a chance of getting a girl if he had a good personality. I thought women were the bastions of morality and virtue so why would they care about a man's looks? That beauty is from the inside, i.e. a man's moral character, than the outside.
I also didn't focused on sex too much. I did watch a lot of porn starting when I entered middle school, but I separated sex from romantic attraction and viewed women in porn and sex work different from regular women. I viewed most women to be asexual almost, that they didn't want to be sexually objectified and didn't cared about sex but more so companionship and non-sexual physical intimacy. And I viewed hookup culture of being baseless and sexist. Which is why when I had crushes on girls at school it was mostly wanting companionship and being able to kiss them as oppose of just wanting to have sex with them, and I didn't necessarily lust for them.
To me, being romantically attracted to someone and being sexually attracted to someone were too different feelings (I want companionship mostly vs I just want to fuck and get done with it) along with the physical criteria (being cute vs being sexy) but not morally excusive. When I was younger french kissing was the most important end goal since that's what I saw on television, rather than sex.