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Chapter 3
by
paulthemazing
Which One?
Bully
Bully NTR (Netorase) is an adult-fiction trope that reframes betrayal through consensual awareness, even when the third party is an intimidating or domineering bully figure. Unlike Netorare (loss through betrayal) or Netori (active taking), Netorase centers on a relationship where one partner knowingly allows the situation to occur, despite the discomfort it creates.
In this variant, the bully’s role is defined by social or psychological dominance rather than secrecy. They may be a classmate, coworker, superior, or public figure whose presence carries pressure and unease. The tension comes not from deception, but from the conscious decision to permit interaction with someone who embodies threat or authority.
Consent is the core distinction. The original partner is aware of what is happening and does not frame it as a hidden betrayal. However, this consent is often complex, shaped by fear, fascination, resignation, or emotional dependency rather than enthusiasm.
Psychologically, Bully Netorase explores how power dynamics distort agency. Allowing the situation can become a coping mechanism—choosing controlled exposure over unpredictable confrontation. The story often examines whether consent remains meaningful when pressure is ever-present.
Emotional conflict is central. Even with awareness, jealousy, shame, detachment, or numbness frequently coexist. The partner who allows the situation may struggle internally, questioning their self-worth or motives while outwardly maintaining acceptance.
The bully’s presence intensifies these themes. Because the bully is intentionally portrayed as overbearing or cruel, the narrative emphasizes endurance over desire. The discomfort is part of the experience, making the choice to allow it psychologically charged.
Narratively, Bully Netorase tends to be introspective rather than explosive. The drama unfolds internally—through rationalizations, shifting boundaries, and emotional fatigue—rather than overt confrontation or domination.
Audience reactions to this trope are mixed. Some view it as a study of **** consent under pressure, while others find it unsettling due to the blurred line between choice and ****. Its appeal lies in tension rather than gratification.
Thematically, Bully Netorase reflects real-world questions about autonomy in unequal power structures. It asks whether choosing to endure a harmful dynamic grants control—or merely masks vulnerability.
Ultimately, Bully NTR (Netorase) is less about infidelity and more about aware submission to circumstance. Its impact comes from examining how consent, fear, and emotional survival intersect when power imbalances cannot be ignored, making it one of the more psychologically nuanced branches of the NTR spectrum.
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NTR
Cucks, Bastards, Ugly, Bullies, & Etc.
Nothing off Limits
Updated on Feb 17, 2026
by paulthemazing
Created on Feb 16, 2026
by paulthemazing
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