Synopsis
Meisa, who works at a real estate company, accompanies her development director on a business trip. After the negotiations, they discover a mistake at the accommodation—they’ve been assigned to share a room. Unable to refuse, they drink in the room and the director listens to Meisa talk about her boyfriend. But her lovey-dovey stories drive the man’s reason wild. Suddenly attacked, Meisa finds herself unwillingly succumbing to the affair and climaxing repeatedly… Throughout the night, they continue their intense encounters in the room and hot spring over and over again…
※ Recorded content may vary depending on the distribution method.
Editorial Review
This firmly occupies the contemporary mainstream of Japanese adult doujin work—the workplace NTR scenario remains one of the most prolific subgenres, and this entry leans into the formula’s core appeal: the corruption of professional boundaries and romantic fidelity through proximity and circumstance. The “room share mishap” premise is nearly archetypal at this point, but execution separates the forgettable from the compelling.
What distinguishes this release is its foregrounding of psychological manipulation over pure coercion. The director’s strategy—using alcohol and Meisa’s own words about her relationship as emotional leverage—positions this as a slow-burn seduction rather than sudden assault, even if resistance ultimately collapses. The shift between room and hot spring locations suggests production value and scene variety that many lower-tier releases skip. Meisa Nishimoto’s prominence in the tags confirms this is a solo performer vehicle, meaning the work’s success hinges entirely on her ability to convey the arc from refusal to repeated climax—a performance demand that separates notable releases from generic ones.
The 4K and High Definition specifications indicate technical polish, though the caveat about content varying by distribution method suggests some frustration may await buyers depending on where they access it. The drama tag hints at narrative scaffolding beyond pure mechanics, which matters to the portion of NTR enthusiasts who demand psychological plausibility over mechanical detachment.
Viewers seeking the genre’s core fantasy—the breakdown of romantic exclusivity through workplace power imbalance—will find familiar gratification here. Those fatigued by NTR’s overexposure or uncomfortable with the predatory framing of the setup should look elsewhere. For committed genre consumers, the technical specifications and Nishimoto’s involvement warrant investigation.
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Related Tags:
High Definition | NTR | 4K | drama | infidelity
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