Synopsis
You are summoned as the Holy Maiden in the 18+ otome game “The Holy Maiden and Abstinence.”
To avoid erotic scenes, you deceive the five party members and conquest targets by claiming that physical contact with the opposite sex negatively affects your holy power. You successfully complete the holy stone purification quest and save the world.
Wishing to return to your original world for your younger brother’s sake, you seek the cooperation of the wizard Rune who orchestrated your summoning. However, on the night of your scheduled departure, the conquest targets are waiting at the meeting place instead.
When they discover your plan to leave without saying goodbye and uncover your deception, the pent-up romantic feelings and desire of the conquest targets finally explode…!
■Characters: The Holy Maiden (You) – Taking care of your younger brother in place of your deceased parents, though he blames you for their deaths. You started playing “The Holy Maiden and Abstinence” after being drawn to the wizard Rune’s appearance, which resembles your brother’s laugh.
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This Week’s Top Rankings:
Editorial Review
[Riley’s Pick]
This premise is delightfully meta—a protagonist who claims to have completed an 18+ otome game while avoiding all intimate scenes finds themselves in an ironic twist when reality becomes far more intense than any game scenario. What makes this work particularly engaging is how it subverts typical otome expectations by blurring the line between fictional romance and genuine, albeit coercive, encounters.
The narrative tension comes from watching a character who thought they’d “won” by circumventing the game’s adult content discover that their declaration has triggered something far more serious in the real world. The multiple character involvement suggests a harem-style dynamic where different personalities create varied scenarios, adding layers of psychological complexity beyond simple wish fulfillment.
The forced/coercion tag indicates this leans into darker territory—not a gentle romance but something with genuine stakes and conflict. The obsessive element suggests at least some characters have deeper, potentially problematic attachments to the protagonist, which can create compelling if uncomfortable narrative moments. The focus on specific intimate acts shows Samidori’s work embraces explicit detail while potentially exploring different facets of desire.
This work best suits readers who enjoy psychologically complex scenarios with morally gray situations and aren’t seeking traditional romance. If you appreciate otome parodies with a darker edge and don’t shy away from ethically murky territory, discover what Henhenta has curated for you.
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