Columns Soapland

Omiya Soapland Jobs: The Reputation

On the reputation of soapland jobs in Omiya, broken down by Taniguchi from 20-plus years of firsthand experience in the trade.

Omiya Soapland Jobs: The Reputation

"Omiya soapland jobs — the reputation" — some of you hear that and immediately know what it means, others don't.

I'm 42 and still out walking the floor of this world, so I'll sum it up from a real, on-the-ground angle.

Why this topic matters

A surprising amount of fuzoku (Japan's licensed adult-entertainment business) information is poorly organized. Beginners especially tend to end up not even knowing where to start looking.

Elon
ElonI have no ambition to conquer every soapland in the country, but I've made the rounds of each region's "signature" soaplands. My takeaway: service quality and cleanliness don't move in lockstep. Even a budget joint can deliver god-tier service.

What this actually means

In a word: knowing versus not knowing changes the quality of the whole experience.

Elon
Elon42, single, living alone. When nearly your whole paycheck disappears into fuzoku, you naturally develop an eye for the real thing. That's not a brag and it's not regret — I'm just putting it down as fact.

What I've written here is the essence of the knowledge I've built up over 20 years.

Last word

Elon
ElonAfter getting circumcised and having a pearl implant put in, I walk around now with the confidence that I'm "fully prepped." It widened what I can do in a session, sure, but the bigger difference is the mental ease. To anyone agonizing over the procedure: do it, you won't regret it.

If you've got questions on this topic, hit me in the comments or on social. And give First Class Ruby a look while you're at it.