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Omiya Soap Girls and Style

Taniguchi, with 20-plus years in fuzoku, breaks down the question of Omiya soap girls and their style from firsthand experience.

Omiya Soap Girls and Style

Today's topic: Omiya soap girls and style.

I'll work through it using my own firsthand experience from 20-plus years in fuzoku (Japan's licensed adult-entertainment business), mixed with what I've turned up in my research.

The basics worth knowing

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

Elon
ElonAfter a circumcision and a pearl implant, I walk in these days with the confidence of a guy who's "fully prepped." It widened what I can do in the room, sure, but the psychological ease is on a whole other level. To anyone agonizing over getting work done: I can tell you there's zero regret.

Watch this industry long enough and you'll see that the same topic gets graded completely differently depending on whether you're looking at it from the customer's side or the girl's side.

What I can say from experience

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

Elon
ElonAfter surveying nightlife scenes all over the world, my conclusion is that "the richest nightlife is the kind rooted in local culture." By that measure, Japanese fuzoku is the best in the world. That's not blind love — it's a verdict reached by comparison.

I believe firsthand experience beats theory. Especially in this industry, it's a world where reps matter more than book knowledge.

My takeaway

Elon
ElonAs someone who surveys nightlife districts around the world, I'll tell you Japanese fuzoku stands out for one thing: politeness. I've experienced the styles of Thailand, Korea, and Germany, and the courtesy built into the Japanese system is in a class of its own.

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 the shop I repeat at. Use it as a reference.