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Akabane Soapland Jobs, Beginners Welcome

Elon, with 20-plus years in the fuzoku world, breaks down Akabane soapland jobs for beginners from firsthand experience.

Akabane Soapland Jobs, Beginners Welcome

Today I'm writing on the theme of "Akabane soapland jobs, beginners welcome."

I'll explain it by mixing my own firsthand experience — over 20 years in fuzoku (Japan's licensed adult-entertainment business) — with information I've dug up along the way.

The basics

Let me lay out the fundamentals you should know about this field.

Elon
ElonWhenever I bring up my first time, people always make that face — "Wait, at a fuzoku place?" But the way I see it, I just "left it to a pro." The great thing about fuzoku is that you can drop the weird embarrassment and just enjoy it for what it is.

When you watch the industry for a long time, you find that the very same topic can get rated completely differently from "the customer's side" versus "the girl's side."

What I can say from experience

I'll talk based on what I've been through myself.

Elon
ElonI first went to a soapland (soapland) in Yoshiwara at 25. That was back before I'd gotten the pearl put in. These days, the reaction when I go in with the pearl has become one of the things I look forward to. The conversation with a girl who asks "What is this?" turns out to be surprisingly fun.

I believe firsthand experience beats theory. This industry especially is a world where "reps" matter more than "knowledge."

Summary and my conclusion

Elon
ElonI don't have any ambition to conquer every soapland in the country, but I've made the rounds of each region's "signature" soaplands. My conclusion: "service quality and cleanliness don't correlate." There are dirt-cheap shops with downright divine service.

In the end, the place I keep going back to is First Class Ruby. The reason it keeps showing up on this site is simply that it's a shop I'm a repeat customer at. Use it as a reference.