Synopsis
Riko was living a fulfilling life with her fiancé. She had briefly dated a doctor who was her ex-boyfriend, but quickly discovered he was a loser and left him behind. However, one day her ex-boyfriend tracks down their home address and forces his way inside. Under the influence of aphrodisiacs, Riko loses all self-control and continues having sex with him endlessly, even as her fiancé returns home. ※ Recording content may differ depending on distribution method.
Editorial Review
NTR through coerced drug play remains a polarizing subgenre, and this entry positions itself squarely in the non-consensual aphrodisiac corner where psychological humiliation matters more than narrative finesse. The forced-drug scenario has become increasingly common among doujin works dealing with betrayal themes, though the specificity here—an ex-boyfriend’s deliberate home invasion and chemical manipulation—escalates the antagonistic framing beyond typical setup variations.
What distinguishes this work is its dramatic scaffolding around the fiancé’s discovery. Rather than treating the betrayal as abstract or off-screen, the synopsis emphasizes the timing of his return as the narrative crux, suggesting the production understands that the psychological devastation of witnessing infidelity (especially under duress) is the actual point of engagement for this audience. The 4K tag indicates investment in visual fidelity, which matters considerably when the work hinges on reaction shots and intimate detail work. The cowgirl positioning is tagged separately, suggesting it’s a thematic anchor rather than incidental—this particular vulnerability carries specific humiliation weight for viewers seeking that dynamic.
The character choice of Hoshino Riko, a recognizable name in the doujin space, signals this targets fans already invested in her prior characterization, adding a layer of continuity that casual viewers won’t experience.
This is unambiguously for audiences seeking coercive NTR with drug-play elements where the fiancé’s helpless observation drives the fantasy. The drama tag suggests emotional consequence isn’t being avoided, though whether the work explores aftermath or ends at the moment of maximum betrayal remains unclear from the synopsis alone. The recording caveat indicates multi-platform availability with potential content variation, worth noting for completionists.
For readers with a specific appetite for non-consensual scenario work backed by production values, this delivers on its premise with thematic clarity. Everyone else should approach based on their tolerance for the subgenre’s fundamentals.
Get “Pleasure Addiction Drug-Induce” on FANZA
This Week’s Top Rankings:
Interested? Get the free trial here ↓











