In the general framework of Quantum Mechanics of exactly solvable models (keeping the coordinates, for the sake of definiteness, real) our contemporary improvement of understanding of {\em complex} potentials leading to {\em real} (i.e., in principle, observable) energies proceeds in three steps. In the prehistory of the subject the first-step discoveries have been made of a close relationship between the reality of the spectrum and a Wick's rotation of the antisymmetric part of the potential. The second-step results are characteristic for the present stage of development. They are well exemplified in ref. [30] or by the L\'evai's paper in question. People (cf. the list of references) calculate the pseudonorms of bound states in closed form. In particular, L\'{e}vai picks up the model with the name Rosen-Morse I and, in detail, he discusses some of the most important properties of the pseudonorms, e.g., their oscillatory excitation-dependence or their change after the backward Wick's rotation. All thiese efforts prepare the terrain for the final construction of the metric operator $\Theta$. In this third-step activity the knowledge of the pseudonorms will prove vital, opening the way towards a climax of the story in the nearest future. Indeed, operator $\Theta$ will characterize physics and measurements. Equivalently, in the language of mathematics one can say that the specification of $\Theta$ will determine the Hamiltonian-assigned, non-standard operation of Hermitian conjugation in the correct though mathematically nontrivial physical Hilbert space of states. MR2464272 Lévai, G. On the normalization constant of $\scr{PT}$-symmetric and real Rosen-Morse I potentials. Phys. Lett. A 372 (2008), no. 43, 6484--6489. 81Qxx