Monster Musume no Iru Nichijou - Vol. 2 Ch. 6

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The centaur girl really has no reason to want to marry a human. I mean, it would be no different than F'ing a horse. Her lady parts are on the back end. Getting mounted by a large horse body (with a large horse C*&K) should be part of her instincts.

On the other hand, I can perhaps see the Lumia and Harpy being satisfied with a human mate.
 
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what does being a virgin have to do with marriage? If you have a problem with being an eternal virgin marriage will most likely fix that.
 
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The MC suffers from physical abuse and they use it as a comic relief.
I mean, violence as a gag isn't exactly new (see Looney Tunes, etc.), but it really isn't particularly funny in a romcom context, and I think manga authors gradually caught onto that, since you don't see it much in newer works. But this first got published in 2012 and I think this was still a popular trope back then.
 
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But this first got published in 2012 and I think this was still a popular trope back then.
It is still a popular troupe, just not with the new gen that exposed to twitter "self righteous".


This is going to sound very much like an excuse, and go ahead if you think so, but let me explain.


I grow up at a time where "play rough" i still just play rough. We got hurt, stand back up, laugh at it. I know my friend doesn't try to truly hurt me. We took it as training, if you will. We got accustomed to pain, and we laugh when others get hurt. But we know when to laugh and when to not. There are some who basked in the pain of others, but most would just see it as them learning what pain is and laugh with them to lessen the pain.

There is a reason why old people often says that the generation has gotten weak. Because in their view, it does.

But for me, who grow up in the gen gap, knows that it's not people got weaker, just more sensitive. I know that not everyone could tough it up, and laughing at others suffering has become misused and misinterpreted. The old gen, laugh at pain because that's the only thing they could to lessen it and they laugh at the "comedy gag" because it was a reflex for them. It also help that people generally know no one truly harmed there, so it became an excuse to actually laugh to their heart content.

The problem now is that those who got laugh at because of others basked in their pain. Those people find solace in online when they can't voice their frustration IRL. That is fine. But what's not fine is them displacing their frustration and projecting it onto others online. Now, when someone is hurt because of their friend and they both laugh it out, people online would quick to judge and cancel the friend that did the hurt, even when they are just play rough with no one actually hurt. This trend grows, people start finding like minded online, and others started to have to tiptoed when online. Younger audience who saw this, slowly accept that there is no such thing as "play rough". And now, we see people who complain at every little thing.

2015 is pretty much the last year for the troupe to still be seen as funny since after that, the new gen is the one in control of the creative production
 
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It is still a popular troupe, just not with the new gen that exposed to twitter "self righteous".


This is going to sound very much like an excuse, and go ahead if you think so, but let me explain.


I grow up at a time where "play rough" i still just play rough. We got hurt, stand back up, laugh at it. I know my friend doesn't try to truly hurt me. We took it as training, if you will. We got accustomed to pain, and we laugh when others get hurt. But we know when to laugh and when to not. There are some who basked in the pain of others, but most would just see it as them learning what pain is and laugh with them to lessen the pain.

There is a reason why old people often says that the generation has gotten weak. Because in their view, it does.

But for me, who grow up in the gen gap, knows that it's not people got weaker, just more sensitive. I know that not everyone could tough it up, and laughing at others suffering has become misused and misinterpreted. The old gen, laugh at pain because that's the only thing they could to lessen it and they laugh at the "comedy gag" because it was a reflex for them. It also help that people generally know no one truly harmed there, so it became an excuse to actually laugh to their heart content.

The problem now is that those who got laugh at because of others basked in their pain. Those people find solace in online when they can't voice their frustration IRL. That is fine. But what's not fine is them displacing their frustration and projecting it onto others online. Now, when someone is hurt because of their friend and they both laugh it out, people online would quick to judge and cancel the friend that did the hurt, even when they are just play rough with no one actually hurt. This trend grows, people start finding like minded online, and others started to have to tiptoed when online. Younger audience who saw this, slowly accept that there is no such thing as "play rough". And now, we see people who complain at every little thing.

2015 is pretty much the last year for the troupe to still be seen as funny since after that, the new gen is the one in control of the creative production
I think the problem is that when playing rough is normalized or widely accepted, it's very hard to know for sure whether the party who is subjected to the rough play is actually fine with it or just enduring it for the sake of social acceptance or due to peer pressure. I'm sure there are instances where rough play is actually genuinely consented to from both sides and everything's just fun and games, but I think it's very easy to use it as an excuse for bullying or abuse. I would prefer living in a society where we err on the side of caution with these things, within reasonable bounds, to reduce the number of people who have to suffer in silence. And, independently of whether it's socially acceptable or not, I just don't personally like violence as a gag in general, or find it funny, and particularly not in romcoms.
 

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