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Omegaverse α×Ω: Don’t Expose My Past (Part 1)

    Home BL Comics Omegaverse α×Ω: Don’t Expose My Past (Part 1

    Synopsis

    An omegaverse story: “Carry my child.”

    Akito, an Ω, is purchased by Reiji, an elite α, for 300 million yen at a black market auction.

    Initially resistant, Akito had been selling himself as an Ω to earn money and scrape by day-to-day. Life with Reiji offered stability he’d never known. Though treated as nothing but a lowly Ω before, Reiji sees Akito as a person—and Akito finds himself drawn to him, though he won’t admit it. But Reiji is equally shaken by these feelings.

    After sex, Reiji becomes curious about Akito’s past. Days later, he discovers a video of Akito’s past existence and watches it…

    Editorial Review

    Omegaverse α×Ω slots into the expanding territory of commercial sex dynamics within omegaverse fiction, where the genre’s biological hierarchy becomes a vehicle for exploring power imbalances rooted in economic desperation rather than pure fantasy. This situates it alongside works that treat the omegaverse framework not as escapism but as a lens for examining transactional relationships and their emotional complications.

    What distinguishes this entry is its willingness to foreground the shame and survival mechanics underpinning Akito’s commodification. The narrative doesn’t shy from the ugliness of his circumstances—he wasn’t dreaming of an α, he was starving—which grants emotional weight to his reluctant attraction to Reiji. The setup hinges on a classic tension: Akito’s gradual recognition of personhood through Reiji’s regard versus the lingering trauma of having been treated as merchandise. The discovery of the mysterious video promises to destabilize this fragile equilibrium, introducing past secrets that presumably threaten the tentative intimacy they’ve built. This structure taps into the psychological drama subgenre’s core appeal: watching characters navigate vulnerability after systematic dehumanization.

    The tags confirm mature thematic handling and sexual content, but the synopsis emphasizes emotional exposure over graphic detail—Reiji’s shock upon watching the video suggests narrative focus on psychological fallout rather than titillation. The siteado tag indicates a lighter touch on artwork compared to mainstream manga, which some readers interpret as indicating character-driven storytelling.

    Readers seeking straightforward power fantasy will find the survival-sex angle too grounded. But those drawn to omegaverse works that interrogate the genre’s implicit hierarchies and explore how intimacy forms in asymmetrical relationships will find this genuinely engaging—particularly its refusal to gloss over why Akito was selling himself in the first place.

    Related Tags:

    romance  |  yaoi  |  mature content  |  omegaverse  |  emotional drama

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