Columns Soapland

Omiya Soaplands: The Reputation

Elon, with 20-plus years in the fuzoku world, breaks down the reputation of Omiya soaplands from firsthand experience.

Omiya Soaplands: The Reputation

"Omiya soaplands, the reputation" — some people hear that phrase and immediately get it, others don't.

I'm 42 and still out in the field of this world, so I'll sum it up from a real-world point of view.

Why this topic matters

A surprising amount of fuzoku information is poorly organized. Beginners especially tend to end up not even knowing where to start looking.

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

What this means in concrete terms

In a word: "whether you know or don't know changes the quality of the experience."

Elon
ElonAfter getting circumcised and having pearls implanted, I now feel genuinely "ready." It widened the range of what I can do in a session, sure, but the psychological ease is on another level. To anyone agonizing over the modification: I can tell you there's "no regret in doing it."

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

In closing

Elon
ElonAfter surveying nightlife scenes all over the world, my conclusion is that "a nightlife culture rooted in the local culture is the richest." By that measure, I think Japan's fuzoku is world-class. That's not blind love — it's a judgment based on comparison.

If you've got questions about this topic, drop a comment or hit me on social. And check out First Class Ruby while you're at it.