Every time I play a game that reuses these same background art assets, I just imagine they are all happening in the same universe at the same high school in Japan and it makes me giggle
This may be a real problem with the amount of Koikatsu and Honey Select based games we have around...
I prefer to imagine that no porn is real, and it's all actors and alike. Yeah, even the most "interesting ones": I believe that Goblin Slayer made goblin rape become a trend, which gave job to many goblin porn actors, while orc rape became less relevant, and some orc porn actors became jobless thanks to it.
And just like irl, excessive sexualization of certain kind of people can be a problem. Tentacles monsters, for example, suffer with prejudice of people who see them as mere sex objects.
And obviously, laws are also applied. For loli porn, for example, it's just short people with lots of CGI and and make up, while bestiality porn is made animatronics, people on costumes, and so on. People into guro are not only sadists, but also people who find awesome the special effects that they use to represent an unrealistically violent sex where no living being was actually harmed during the recording.
would pregnant traps still be considered mpreg, or does it not loop around the horseshoe theory to become wholesome normal preg again? they just become mothers (male) at this point
Mpreg. Although "tpreg" would still be a welcome new tag. And just saying, it can still be wholesome.
For it it to me "regular preg", it would need to be with a woman, maybe even if with a trans woman instead of a cis woman.
And yeah, I'm taking in account the idea that trap and trans are different things, since almost all characters that we call trap are just men, who identify themselves as male, and just happens to crossdress all/almost all the time, and there are even cases in which trap is a separate gender or sex. Just a small portion of characters that people call trap are actually trans, which are people who were assigned male at birth but identify themselves as female (I don't know which case the author uses here, tho).