Synopsis
Mizuki and her cool coworker Hayamizu are drinking buddies who share everything together.
Mizuki considers him a “precious male friend” she can confide in about her boyfriend’s complaints.
But behind her back, Hayamizu quietly nurtures an unrequited love for her――
When drunk Mizuki falls asleep, Hayamizu crosses a forbidden line with her unconscious body.
He tries to restrain his escalating desires with his last shred of reason, but one whispered word from sleeping Mizuki ignites something dark within him…
“You didn’t notice I’m going raw? Sorry, but I’m not stopping.”
“I want to cherish you” and “I want to ruin you”
Hayamizu’s twisted, obsessive feelings forcibly break open the heart and body of Mizuki, who only ever wanted to stay friends――
Get “Sleep ○× NTR: Stealing My Cowo” on DLsite
This Week’s Top Rankings:
Editorial Review
Sleep ○× NTR positions itself in the increasingly crowded niche of non-consensual workplace erotica, where coworker dynamics and alcohol-induced vulnerability have become reliable narrative scaffolding. What distinguishes this entry is its explicit focus on the psychological friction between obsessive care and destructive possession—the tagline’s duality of “cherish” versus “ruin” suggests the author understands that NTR operates most potently when built on corrupted affection rather than simple predation.
The work’s central mechanism—sleep play paired with forced scenarios—creates a specific appeal: Mizuki’s unconsciousness becomes both narrative convenience and thematic statement about consent obliteration. Her initial trust in Hayamizu as a confidant makes the betrayal structurally tighter than random assault narratives. The detail that she voices encouragement while asleep (the “You didn’t notice I’m going raw?” exchange) indicates the author is leaning into a particular fantasy: the target’s own body and subconscious desires becoming instruments against her conscious boundaries. The breeding and creampie tags suggest this isn’t about momentary transgression but sustained violation with reproductive stakes, escalating the psychological intensity beyond typical coworker infidelity scenarios.
The obsession tag matters here—this reads less like opportunistic assault and more like a carefully cultivated possession fantasy, which will resonate differently depending on whether readers seek scenario-driven erotica or character-driven psychological deterioration. The unrequited love framing gives Hayamizu internal justification that the work presumably explores, making this appeal to readers interested in the perpetrator’s warped emotional logic.
This work demands an audience comfortable with sustained non-consensual scenarios where the violation deepens rather than resolves, paired with obsessive male leads whose twisted affection becomes the actual erotic throughline. For that specific taste profile, the psychological texture here likely delivers.
Related Tags:
Creampie | forced | non-consensual | Breeding | sleep play
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