Turning succubi into daughters is gonna be the next genre like isekai is lmaoThis is the second guy I've seen turn a succubi into a daughter this year.
I'm expecting a gag anime on the theme in a year.
"Dropped into the Demon King's Castle in Another World?! All I was given was the ???-Rank Skill 'Daughterfication', But Now All My Daughters are Pushing Me to Be the Next Demon King?!?!"Turning succubi into daughters is gonna be the next genre like isekai is lmao
(these are links to real series, the titles aren't accurate"Dropped into the Demon King's Castle in Another World?! All I was given was the ???-Rank Skill 'Daughterfication', But Now All My Daughters are Pushing Me to Be the Next Demon King?!?!"
I was once theorising the Japanese were left with regrets after losing the WW2, but someone told me it's because a slave girl automatically removes the big hurdle of needing to approach a girl normally, getting to know her, getting along with her, becoming friends, and finally becoming lovers. Or alternatively, like in this series' case (?), it's just a convenient setting for saving a girl in a totally desperate situation rather easily and earn a lot of goodwill from her. There are children in abysmal situations in real life, in every country, in criminal, substance abusing, and such households, but there's obviously no magic trick for a random joe to "save" a child from such a family and reach a Disney ending all smoothly. While you are at, it's all the same make it even more fictional then, since a realistic series might be too complicated for most authors, and it might not even be entertaining for readers.Lmao, what's up with the Japanese and slavery
So who's the first?This is the second guy I've seen turn a succubi into a daughter this year.
Kichi (kitiokitioo)So who's the first?
normally I would just say blame shield hero but you actually thought about itI was once theorising the Japanese were left with regrets after losing the WW2, but someone told me it's because a slave girl automatically removes the big hurdle of needing to approach a girl normally, getting to know her, getting along with her, becoming friends, and finally becoming lovers. Or alternatively, like in this series' case (?), it's just a convenient setting for saving a girl in a totally desperate situation rather easily and earn a lot of goodwill from her. There are children in abysmal situations in real life, in every country, in criminal, substance abusing, and such households, but there's obviously no magic trick for a random joe to "save" a child from such a family and reach a Disney ending all smoothly. While you are at, it's all the same make it even more fictional then, since a realistic series might be too complicated for most authors, and it might not even be entertaining for readers.