Props to all the leotards in this series. Beyond the ecchi, there lingers a few mysteries: why is Yota here? What's in the castle? Who are the Karu? What does the jealous god want? Decent reason to read on, to uncover these secrets. I cannot imagine this manga will last to One Piece lengths, so it should be able to propel itself reasonably well. If I were to write a "log line" for this series, it would be "Yota eats sloppy pussy in a strange fantasy world." Such a premise is humorous enough to keep me reading for a little longer. Anyone who might consider reading this should look up its author beforehand to get a sense of what to expect (at least, I always do this), so anyone who reads this and takes offense would necessarily out themselves as an idiot. Point is, Okamoto seems averse to family-friendly concepts. I am not too familiar with Lynn Okamoto I've seen the first few minutes of the episode of Elfen Lied many times in ninth grade, but was always turned off by the remainder, at least back in my "manime" years, and when I did get more into moé and fanservice I would have considered the series to be "too edgy." I read a little bit of Kimi wa Midara na Boku no Joou, I think in freshman year of college, which has art by a different person, but which is otherwise not unlike what we have here namely, I remember the main girl cumming all over her chair or something, or at least the main guy could smell her cunt-juice during class, something like that. I can definitely see this work being polarizing, and between its rating here and many of the reviews it looks like I'm not wrong (disregarding that many reviews are by people who seem to either not like manga and/or hate the Japanese). Oh, and the girls will die upon reaching adulthood if they haven't lost their virginity because an evil god is tormenting them. This manga reads like a parody of the overdone "isekai" branch of the fantasy genre: Yota is pushed out of a window at school by some weird teru teru bozu-looking monster, wakes up in a fantasy land where human males haven't existed in 3000 years, and has to lay low because all the girls have been cursed to cum their pants when they touch a boy. Non-pornographic erotic manga are almost always very funny to me, and Parallel Paradise is no exception (okay, actual H is often funny to me as well). Genitals.! It's so wet I can barely see it." Thanks again to our Patrons for making a project like this possible." Whoa. The version I made is much higher resolution and quality. Unfortunately, the rips people have previously put online are of lackluster quality- to the point where it honestly dampens the eroticism. Combine all these factors and suddenly image quality really matters in terms of seeing what’s going on. The artist also tends to draw nipples relatively small, from decently far away. For artistic reasons, there’s often a hazy, messy quality to the foreground. Why? As said before, the sex scenes are intense and sloppy. While this series is technically available for free on downloading sites, I went ahead and got the ebook version for this project anyway. The sex scenes are as predictable as you’d expect, but there’s enough substance surrounding those scenes to make you care about what’s happening. While the sex scenes themselves are more hardcore than some hentai, the story is still well enough constructed that it still feels like you are reading a real manga. The intensity is actually justified by the story too- since if the hero is too slow to climax it could actually doom the girls to a gooey death. There are liquids flying everywhere and the girls almost look like they are in pain from what seems like a state of permanent orgasm. Not only that, but the sex scenes are often quite graphic. The result is multiple sex scenes per volume. The big difference being that instead of saving the girls with a manufactured pill, our hero has to save them with his cum. It’s basically like the plot in Brynhildr in a sense, in that both stories revolve around saving girls with a mysterious condition from turning into a puddle of goo. Whereas the previous two works kept the ecchi aspects relatively in check, Parallel Paradise goes off the deep end. He’s most famous for Elfen Lied, and his follow-up work Brynhildr in the Darkness was worth reading as well. Parallel Paradise is the current manga being worked on by Lynn Okamoto.
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