Synopsis
Shibazaki Haru, a playful employee at an AV company who develops adult products. Following an order from management—something senior employees have also experienced—she’s assigned to do trial shifts at popular adult entertainment establishments!
Visit real adult shops for hands-on experience to better understand customer preferences and male reactions. When clients make requests and Haru struggles to refuse, unexpected situations unfold at a massage parlor, delivery health service, and group party event. Her first-ever adult industry work takes an unexpectedly wild turn!?
*Note: Content may vary depending on distribution method.
Editorial Review
This is a rare hybrid that sits uneasily between documentary procedural and scripted reality—a “doujin work” that’s actually a quasi-professional venture from SOD Create, the major AV studio’s independent label. It positions itself as workplace anthropology with an explicit hook: sending a company employee into the field to gather market research, which serves as the narrative justification for what follows.
What distinguishes this from standard adult content is its mockumentary framing. Rather than traditional scene-based construction, it uses the premise of “learning the industry from the ground up” to justify visits across three distinct service categories: retail adult shops, health services, and group events. This structure allows for variety in setting and scenario type without the usual narrative contrivance. The documentary angle also means production includes location work and customer interactions beyond the central performer, which creates an authenticity texture absent from purely studio-bound work.
The appeal hinges entirely on whether you’re drawn to this specific blend of workplace comedy, semi-realistic service industry scenarios, and the performer’s unscripted reactions to increasingly unconventional situations. Shibazaki Haru’s characterization as “playful” and someone who “struggles to refuse” becomes the emotional through-line—the work banks on watching her navigate boundaries across unfamiliar contexts rather than anticipating scripted beats.
This lands squarely for viewers fatigued by repetitive scenario work who crave the documentary texture that implies spontaneity, even if that spontaneity is carefully constructed. The group activity tag suggests ensemble participation rather than isolated encounters, which differentiates it from solo-focused alternatives in this space.
The variable content warning suggests distribution fragmentation, likely meaning different versions exist—worth investigating before purchasing to ensure you’re getting the intended cut.
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