Synopsis
“I’m expelling you from the party.”
“Why?! Tell me the reason!”
“Because you’re a prince!”
Zachary, an adventurer in the party, has been stalked by the magician (prince) he expelled yesterday.
When he casually brushed him off by suggesting he date the guild receptionist instead, the prince became enraged and marked him with an obscene seal.
Ever since, whenever Zachary goes on quests, his body aches unbearably unless the prince… fills him completely.
There’s no way I’m falling for obscene marks!
**Contents:**
Main Story P46 + Prequel P4 + Cover P1 + Bonus P2 + Digital Extra Manga P3 = Total P56
Black bar censoring
Original: Shimozuki Tentsubu
Manga: Kisuke
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This Week’s Top Rankings:
Editorial Review
This possessive-lover fantasy romance sits firmly in the yandere-dominant subgenre that’s seen a resurgence in BL doujin circles, leveraging magical coercion as both plot device and aphrodisiac. The obscene mark mechanic—a binding seal that creates physical dependency—is a well-worn conceit in BL, but pairing it with the prince-commoner dynamic and the protagonist’s resistance-before-capitulation arc positions this squarely in the wish-fulfillment territory that dominates contemporary doujin production.
What distinguishes this particular entry is its commitment to the forced-proximity narrative with explicit sexual stakes. The premise hinges on Zachary’s initial rejection prompting an escalation into bodily control, which the tags confirm carries substantial erotic content (creampie, fellatio). The dual structure of main story plus prequel suggests deliberate worldbuilding around how this prince-mage developed his obsession, lending psychological texture that elevates it beyond pure mechanics-driven smut. Kisuke’s manga adaptation of Shimozuki Tentsubu’s original keeps visual clarity across 56 pages, balancing character development against the graphic content that the black bar censoring acknowledges.
The party-expulsion framing provides practical justification for isolation scenarios, a narrative efficiency that reflects mature doujin design. The guilt-by-proximity angle—Zachary repeatedly finding reasons to return to the prince to manage his seal-induced suffering—represents the possessive archetype functioning as intended: removing external escape routes while preserving the illusion of agency.
Readers invested in yandere princes, magical binding mechanics, and high-pressure dominance with eventual (if grudging) emotional capitulation will find the 56-page investment worthwhile. Those seeking subtlety in power dynamics or reluctance arcs with genuine ambiguity should look elsewhere. This is uncompromising execution of a specific fantasy, executed with structural competence and explicit follow-through.
Related Tags:
Creampie | Fellatio | Boys' Love | Yandere | Possessive
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