Synopsis
When a brother and sister who love one another dearly elope they end up getting teleported to another world!? In that other world is an autonomously governed region where other similarly teleported people live.
The siblings are told that they can get married there without persecution, so…?
Forbidden love is consummated by Isekai Power for a Happy Happy Ending!





| Circle | AquaDrop |
| Tags | Manga, JPEG, PDF file, Japanese |
| Price | 66JPY |
Editorial Review
This sits squarely in the niche intersection of isekai fantasy and incest romance—a subgenre that’s grown increasingly confident in recent years, particularly within doujin circles where premise-first storytelling flourishes. Where mainstream manga hesitates, independent creators lean into transgressive premises as genuine narrative anchors rather than mere shock value, and this work appears positioned there.
The setup shows genuine structural thought: rather than handwaving the taboo through dream logic or possession, the narrative builds a functional world-system that actively *normalizes* the relationship. That autonomously governed sanctuary for teleported people creates plausible social infrastructure for what would otherwise be unsustainable. It’s the kind of worldbuilding that signals the author treats the premise seriously rather than exploitatively. The “Isekai Power” framing in the synopsis suggests systematic magical justification rather than simple wish fulfillment, which distinguishes this from lower-effort entries in both the isekai and incest-romance spaces.
The “deeply in love” characterization matters here too—this isn’t predatory or coercive dynamics wrapped in fantasy drag, but rather mutual affection given legal and social recognition. That emotional grounding appeals to a specific reader who seeks romance narratives with transgressive premises but legitimate emotional stakes.
This reaches readers specifically hunting for incest romance with genuine romantic arcs rather than mechanical fantasy setups, particularly those who appreciate isekai’s structural permission to rebuild social norms. The JPEG and PDF file formats suggest accessible, format-flexible distribution typical of successful doujin works.
The work’s confidence in its premise—consummating forbidden love through systematic world-building rather than accident or coercion—marks it as intentional rather than exploitative, which elevates it within its niche considerably.
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