Angelmaximo
New Member
- Jun 20, 2024
- 12
- 17
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Honestly, I hope they don’t add another dickgirl. I don’t really see the appeal of having two in the same story.
Personally, I find the concept of a dickgirl interesting because it allows for some semi-realistic possibilities that a regular male character couldn’t believably have, like entering an all-girls school, using women’s restrooms, or simply being in female-only spaces without it breaking the internal logic of the plot.
From what I understand, the core idea of a dickgirl is that she is considered female in most ways, socially, physically (apart from the anatomical addition) so in settings designed for women, she “fits” more naturally than a male character with similar anatomy might.
Also, I’ve read that in many works, futanari characters are portrayed as more dominant, more “powerful” (physically or sexually) than regular male characters. That extra layer of dominance can add interesting tension or contrast in futa × female pairings: the female partner doesn’t lose her femininity, but the dynamic becomes more complex when one partner embodies both feminine traits and a “male-coded” assertiveness.
To me, futa × female is more engaging because it preserves the all-female aesthetic/relationship feel, but also introduces variation in power roles, logic of settings, and interesting narrative or erotic possibilities, without making everything overly male-centric.
Personally, I find the concept of a dickgirl interesting because it allows for some semi-realistic possibilities that a regular male character couldn’t believably have, like entering an all-girls school, using women’s restrooms, or simply being in female-only spaces without it breaking the internal logic of the plot.
From what I understand, the core idea of a dickgirl is that she is considered female in most ways, socially, physically (apart from the anatomical addition) so in settings designed for women, she “fits” more naturally than a male character with similar anatomy might.
Also, I’ve read that in many works, futanari characters are portrayed as more dominant, more “powerful” (physically or sexually) than regular male characters. That extra layer of dominance can add interesting tension or contrast in futa × female pairings: the female partner doesn’t lose her femininity, but the dynamic becomes more complex when one partner embodies both feminine traits and a “male-coded” assertiveness.
To me, futa × female is more engaging because it preserves the all-female aesthetic/relationship feel, but also introduces variation in power roles, logic of settings, and interesting narrative or erotic possibilities, without making everything overly male-centric.