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Chapter 3 by paulthemazing paulthemazing

Which One?

Bully

Bully NTR (Netori) is an adult-fiction trope that shifts the focus from loss to deliberate taking, driven by intimidation and dominance. Instead of emphasizing the victim’s suffering as the central lens, Netori places attention on the bully as the active agent who knowingly intrudes into an existing relationship and claims the partner through **** of will and power.

In this variant, the bully’s defining trait is control rather than attraction. Physical strength, social status, reputation, or fear-based authority are used as tools to assert dominance. The act of taking someone who is already committed is intentional, reinforcing the transgressive core of Netori.

Unlike Netorare, where helplessness is central, Bully Netori frames the relationship as a conquest. The existing bond is not mourned but treated as something to be overridden. The bully’s awareness of that bond is often what fuels their actions.

Psychological intimidation plays a major role. The bully may apply constant pressure—threats, humiliation, isolation, or manipulation—until resistance collapses. The emphasis is on breaking boundaries rather than bypassing them.

The partner being taken is frequently portrayed as conflicted. Fear, survival instincts, or emotional exhaustion can drive compliance, creating a morally tense space where choices are made under duress. This ambiguity adds depth without removing the bully’s agency or culpability.

Narratively, Bully Netori often adopts a cold, predatory tone. The bully’s perspective or presence dominates the story, while the original partner’s emotional pain is minimized or ignored, reinforcing the imbalance at the heart of the trope.

This version of NTR leans heavily into themes of entitlement. The bully views access to the partner as something they can claim, not earn. This mindset underscores the unsettling nature of the trope and its reliance on power over consent.

Audience reactions are sharply divided. Some readers engage with the trope as an exploration of **** dominance and taboo control, while others find it disturbing due to its overt depiction of **** and ****.

From a thematic standpoint, Bully Netori reflects fears of predatory authority—how those with power can impose their desires simply because they can. It externalizes anxiety about being overpowered by someone who recognizes no moral boundaries.

Ultimately, Bully NTR (Netori) is less about intimacy and more about assertion of dominance. Its impact comes from portraying betrayal as an intentional act of control, making it one of the most aggressive and controversial expressions of the NTR genre.

Where To Go Next?

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