Synopsis
My girlfriend Miki has been taking out her frustrations on me lately. We’ve been fighting more, and I think we’re in a rut. She says I’m indecisive and unreliable. Miki shares an apartment with her best friend Ria. Even when I visit, she lashes out at me in front of Ria. The only consolation is that kind-hearted Ria always takes my side.
Both were supposed to go on a seminar trip, but Ria cancelled due to illness and asked me to pick up some things for her. When I deliver them, something seems off. It doesn’t seem like she’s actually sick. “Miki’s cheating on me… with some senior who’s rich, drives a luxury car, and is reliable… he’s going on the trip too… that’s why she didn’t want to go with me.” I’m shocked by this discovery. “You’ve been too cold to Hideto, and I can’t forgive this betrayal… I liked you first… I only put up with it because it was Miki… I could make Hideto happier…”
Ria suddenly kisses me. While Miki’s out cheating, something inside me snaps. Ria’s soft, curvy body feels so comforting and perfect to hold… “I love you…” When was the last time I felt love during sex? This isn’t cheating anymore—it’s real. For two days while Miki’s away, we lose ourselves in passion like newlyweds, making love over and over.
Editorial Review
This is textbook NTR drama positioned squarely in the emotional-escalation school of contemporary doujin romance. Where much of the current NTR landscape leans toward either humiliation fantasy or straightforward infidelity narrative, this work uses the girlfriend’s betrayal as a catalyst for exploring the protagonist’s desperation and vulnerability—classic S1 No.1 Style framing that privileges psychological breakdown over mechanical scenario.
The setup’s strength lies in its specificity: the girlfriend Miki doesn’t just cheat, but strategically excludes the protagonist while positioning a rival as more “reliable”—a deliberate emasculation that makes the best friend’s intervention feel less like random temptation and more like emotional rescue. That threshold moment, where Ria’s confession pivots from comfort to seduction, is where the work’s dramatic architecture lands. The tags reveal a production mindful of presentation: 4K, exclusive access, and the “Kiss” emphasis suggest intimate framing that prioritizes the sensory and emotional over distance. The busty descriptor isn’t incidental—it signals a contrast that registers visually during that vulnerability.
The truncated synopsis cuts off mid-thought, but the trajectory is clear: two days of transgression while Miki is absent, with the protagonist in a fractured state where he can’t distinguish between genuine connection and rebound impulse. That ambiguity is the work’s thematic center.
This targets readers who want NTR that justifies its emotional stakes—people invested in how betrayal reshapes desire rather than simple cuckoldry mechanics. If you need your infidelity narrative grounded in plausible psychology and relationship friction, this delivers. Casual NTR consumers seeking guilt-free fantasy will find the relationship drama taxing; everyone else should find the premise compelling.
A shame-spiral with actual relational weight.
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