Synopsis
Title: Nia-chan Motto Matagatte (More Straddling)
Release Date: November 20, 2025
Runtime: 89 minutes
Cast: Nia (Ito Meru)
Director: Akiba Masato
Series: Otaku Odyssey
Producer: CPZ69-008
Label: Cosplay Slope 69
This is the 8th installment in the Otaku Odyssey series. What sets this series apart is that it goes beyond simply dressing in costumes—each work is crafted to honor and pay homage to the source material, allowing viewers to experience a deeper connection with the story.
[Story Summary]
Year 5000 CE: Earth faces invasion by extraterrestrial lifeforms called Amazon. Cardboard lifeforms, weapons created by these invaders, attack androids. Humanity has fled to “Heaven,” leaving only androids to battle the cardboard entities. During combat, Nia encounters a special individual cardboard lifeform seeking offspring. As it abandons its warlike nature and yearns to live human-like, a human heart awakens within its cardboard body. To Nia, it now appears completely human. The cardboard lifeform declares: “I want to have creampie sex right now! Let’s do it like humans do!” Is this sex? Or procreation? Don’t miss the shocking ending!
[Editor’s Review by Kenji Sato]
This work, featuring actress Ito Meru as Nia, skillfully blends SF elements with otaku sensibilities. The 89-minute runtime effectively balances drama with intimate scenes. The cosplay-driven scene variety and creative camera work are noteworthy. The visual composition emphasizing her beauty is commendable, with solid pacing throughout. Includes squirting scenes and more.
Editorial Review
Cosplay-driven adult content with sci-fi framing remains a crowded category, but the Otaku Odyssey series has carved out modest distinction by treating source material reverence as a production philosophy rather than an afterthought. This eighth installment leans into that commitment with a narrative scaffold—the Year 5000 CE setting, the android-versus-alien premise, the “cardboard lifeform” concept—that gives the cosplay element thematic weight rather than leaving it as pure aesthetic window dressing.
Nia (Ito Meru) carries the work as a solo performer, which immediately limits the dramatic range available. The synopsis pivots on an unexpectedly tender angle: a conflict-born encounter that softens into something resembling emotional connection, with the cardboard entity’s “human heart” awakening serving as the emotional justification for what follows. It’s melodrama in service of justifying the physical content, and whether that lands depends entirely on how the direction executes the tonal shift. The 4K production value and 89-minute runtime suggest investment in pacing, though a single-actress format inherently constrains narrative complexity.
The tension here is structural: cosplay works marketed on source material fidelity can stumble when that fidelity becomes purely visual. Without additional cast members or elaborate scene work, the SF framing risks feeling like set dressing for a straightforward scenario. The “drama” tag indicates directorial intent to layer emotional beats, but solo performer works struggle to generate interpersonal dynamics that justify the framing’s ambition.
This appeals most to viewers who genuinely engage with the sci-fi premise as more than window dressing and appreciate Ito Meru’s performance specifically. The Otaku Odyssey series loyalists will recognize the house style. For general audiences seeking cosplay content, the narrative scaffolding may overcomplicate what simpler works deliver more efficiently.
A thematically committed entry that doesn’t quite transcend its format limitations.
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Related Tags:
Creampie | 4K | drama | cosplay | Single Actress
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