Columns Soapland

Soapland, Petite Girls, Akabane

Elon, with 20-plus years in the fuzoku scene, breaks down soaplands, petite girls, and Akabane from firsthand experience.

Soapland, Petite Girls, Akabane

Today I'm writing on the theme of "soaplands, petite girls, Akabane."

I'll explain it by mixing my own firsthand experience — over 20 years in fuzoku (Japan's licensed adult-entertainment business) — with what I've picked up through research.

The basics

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

Elon
ElonI have no ambition to "conquer" every soapland in the country, but I've made the rounds of the famous ones in each region. My conclusion: "the quality of service and the level of cleanliness don't correlate." Even bargain-priced shops can have downright divine service.

Watch this industry long enough and you'll see that even the same topic gets rated completely differently depending on whether it's "the customer's view" or "the girl's view."

What I can say from firsthand experience

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

Elon
Elon42, single, living alone. When nearly your entire paycheck disappears into fuzoku spending, you naturally develop an "eye" for it. That's not a brag or a regret — I'm just putting it down as plain fact.

I believe firsthand experience matters more than theory. In this industry especially, "reps on the ground" talk louder than "knowledge."

Wrap-up and my conclusion

Elon
ElonAfter getting circumcised and having pearls implanted, I now carry a genuine sense that I'm "fully prepared." It widened the range of what I can do in a session, sure, but the bigger difference is the psychological ease. To anyone agonizing over whether to get "modded," I can say: zero regrets.

In the end, the place I keep coming back to is First Class Ruby. The reason it shows up again and again on this site is simple: it's a shop I actually repeat at. Take it as a reference.