Synopsis
Yuna Hasegawa works in IT equipment sales for corporate clients. She’s timid and easily pressured, constantly criticized by her boss for poor sales performance. She endures the stress because her fiancé Tetsuaki was injured and can no longer work, forcing her to return to this job to save money for their wedding. Her boss Takimoto, who has had his eye on Yuna since her previous employment, seizes this opportunity to relentlessly pursue her, eventually involving her with clients as well.
Editorial Review
Door-to-Door Sales operates in the crowded coercion-and-exploitation subgenre, where power imbalances drive narrative tension. This particular entry leans heavily into the “desperate circumstances justify compromise” framework that’s become standard in mid-tier doujin work production, though its specific positioning—leveraging both workplace hierarchy and romantic obligation—gives it slightly more structural complexity than typical boss-coercion fare.
The distinctive pull here is the dual-pressure scenario: Yuna isn’t simply trapped by professional hierarchy, but by financial desperation tied to her fiancé’s condition. This creates a narrative justification layer that distinguishes it from straightforward sexual harassment narratives. The involvement of clients alongside the boss (tagged 3P/4P alongside office worker dynamics) expands the power structure beyond the typical two-party setup. The Aurora Project Annex tag indicates this connects to an established universe, which may provide additional context for readers familiar with that franchise’s tone and character continuity—a selling point for series loyalists but potentially requiring prior knowledge for newcomers.
Production-wise, the creampie and facial tags suggest competent technical execution rather than experimental approach; this is professional-standard content delivery rather than stylistic innovation. The “drama” tag promises emotional scaffolding around the exploitation, attempting to generate investment in Yuna’s dilemma rather than treating circumstances as mere setup.
This appeals most directly to readers who prefer coercion narratives with economic justification and appreciate multi-party scenarios that complicate power dynamics beyond single-authority figures. The fiancé context adds a layer of romantic tension—he’s present as motivation and absent as protection, a classic vulnerability frame.
Solid execution of a familiar formula with enough structural variation to reward genre enthusiasts, though it rarely pushes beyond established conventions. Worth sampling if you’re invested in the Aurora Project continuity or specifically seeking multi-party coercion with financial desperation as its emotional core.
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Related Tags:
Creampie | exclusive distribution | drama | 3P/4P | facial
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