Are you not aware of the fact that a well known adult game developer was arrested in Australia two months ago for developing a loli game? His house, vehicles, possessions, bank accounts, and other online accounts were seized by the government, and he's currently awaiting trial. If convicted, he faces 10 to 12 years in prison for creating Daz renders of fictional characters.
Tell me again how "not a single developer was arrested".
Now, while I personally dislike loli and shota content, I strongly maintain that no one should be criminally prosecuted for creating drawings, paintings, or other artwork depicting fictional characters, or for telling stories involving fictional characters, unless there were real people who were harmed or exploited during the production of the work. But I don't write the laws in Australia, or any other country, and this is a serious consideration for some developers. People can and do get in trouble for it, depending on the laws where they live.
The rape scenes with Lisa - all of them - were very well done, especially the one in the cinema and the one later that night with just Paul. Those two were artistically outstanding and very erotic. It's a terrible shame that they're now gone from the game.
As for your assumption that all women would have the same response to that kind of traumatic experience, you're wrong. Women are not all the same, just as men are not all the same, and different people have different responses to similar situations. Some women are emotionally devastated by being raped, and the trauma may continue for years. Other women suppress the trauma and just get on with their lives, acting as if nothing had happened. And there are other types of response, as well. All of these different types of responses do happen in real life, with real women, and are therefore within the realm of what is realistic and believable in fiction. Not that fiction always has to be realistic and believable.