>>8588579>>8588880>>8588893>>8588969I think it's because, as the third Anon alluded to, it's treated in the opposite direction as a narrative concept than building off of it alone. It's used to accomplish an end point of the targeted female individuals, whether it be common sense distortion or ending up as an emotionless shell of a person, right from the get-go to accomplish a certain tone during the coming sex scenes.
Although I do disagree with the Anon in regards to society being forced to change by the protagonist. Even if the protagonist was thinking in the big picture enough to do this (despite the fact that he's using such a limitless-potential superpower as common sense distortion to...get his rocks off), the story ends up focusing on the female characters targeted by the protagonist anyway, so narratively it doesn't really matter. So the first anon saying it's "pseudo-vanilla" is partially correct, but not all doujin authors will intend to go that far from the start.
I don't think I've even seen a situation where a widespread common sense distortion put on everyone *except* the females weaves a net to trap them, although this was a concept in the previous writing thread I responded to.
> Girl being made to walk down the street naked as she's embarrassed with herself for doing it, and her face burns with flustered excitement despite herself? Much better. Based. I find sex scenes most interesting when the uniqueness of the character is the basis for interactions/dialogue in sex, and nullifying or distorting that too much via mind control undermines the point: "I want to see this girl having sex in X situation".
Which is why I would strongly recommend the three Kutsujoku VNs by BISHOP. The protagonist can manipulate any person's body, but can't touch their minds. Since he wants to sexually subjugate them anyway, he's not complaining. There's even anime adaptations for the first two, although the second is super rushed and only has two heroines.