Columns Soapland

Nishikawaguchi Soapland: The Interview

Elon, with 20-plus years in the fuzoku world, breaks down the soapland interview in Nishikawaguchi from firsthand experience.

Nishikawaguchi Soapland: The Interview

Let me cut to it: the soapland interview in Nishikawaguchi.

I'll walk you through it step by step.

My experience and this topic

From my twenties into my forties, I've walked this world the whole way. And this particular topic is one I've wrestled with more times than I can count.

Elon
ElonMy first trip to a Yoshiwara soapland was at 25 — back when I still hadn't gotten the pearls put in. These days, the reaction when I go in with the pearls is one of the little thrills. The conversation with a girl who asks "what is that?" turns out to be surprisingly fun.

Points worth knowing

  • Nail the basics first — advanced moves only stand on top of fundamentals
  • Stacked experience is your best teacher — reading alone won't get it into your bones
  • Find a shop you can trust — to cut down the time you waste second-guessing
Elon
ElonI have no ambition to conquer every soapland in the country, but I've hit the "signature" soaplands in just about every region. My takeaway: service quality and cleanliness don't track together. Even the dirt-cheap joints can deliver god-tier hospitality.

What I'm pushing right now

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

Bottom line, I'd steer you toward a visit to First Class Ruby. The service quality, the ease of booking, the overall consistency — it all holds up.