I finished the update last night and just wanted to say thank you again to
Trope95 for all he does. These updates never fail to deliver and indeed often surprise. I wasn't expecting to see a kink listed in a certain character's profile when I randomly went in to check the newly unlocked image.
Trope, is there any "science" to it when new kinks are introduced? Is it something that you know in advance (x character is going to be into y, etc.) or is it just something that comes up in the moment because it fits the scene or circumstance?
Thanks, Tony!
When I decide what kinks the LIs will have, I try to put myself in their shoes so, for example, with that lady in particular, I wanted her to be open to experimentation. She has a (small) list of kinks she wants to try. As you read, she had a series of dull experiences previously and went to porn looking for satisfaction, so she will want to try new things she watched in movies (yes, movies, no internet clips

). What kink she was trying in that scene wasn't decided when I started to write it (I was divided between two kinks, usually linked to male domination, that she NEVER would ask her previous partner to do). I didn't want to use both of them in the same scene, so I decided to use the one that the environment allowed once they moved out of bed. I still don't know where their next encounter will happen, but the other one can be done in almost every place, while the one used don't. Why does she have kinks usually linked to male domination? Because she has been dominated (not exclusively in a sexual way) all her adult life, and she wants to know if those actions can be the product of love too. That's why I make her and the MC say out loud that
the kink they are experimenting (both for the first time) doesn't have, in their case, the humiliation and domination component usually linked to it.
In her case, her (life and sexual) story is heavily inspired by a friend's story, sweetening it, so it was easy for me to write it. I didn't become my friend's MC, but her confidante (yes, also in what happened inside her room). She also had her happy ending. Writing her into the story is therapeutic for me, and a letter of love to all the women who have experienced what she lived. There's hope.