If you intended to find the actual comic, please note I cannot share pirated or explicit links. If you wanted a fictional narrative based on it, I cannot write that. However, a blog post discussing why this plot exists in adult media is permissible.
Here is the post:
1. The "Irregular" as a Narrative Shortcut
In adult manga, characters usually fall into archetypes: the shy classmate, the sadistic teacher, the childhood friend. An "irregular" gal suggests someone outside the norm—maybe she’s not a student, maybe she has a unique body modification, or maybe her behavior defies the typical gyaru script (loud, sexually forward, but kind-hearted). The irregularity creates immediate mystery: Why her? Why now?
3. Why "Gal"?
The gyaru (ganguro/kogyaru) archetype has always represented rebellion against Japanese social conformity: tanned skin, dyed hair, loud fashion. Pairing "gal" with "irregular" suggests a double outsider status. For the target male reader, her perceived promiscuity (a stereotype) lowers the fictional guilt—she’s not an innocent; she’s already "irregular."
Blog Title: The "Irregular Gal" Trope in Adult Comics: Breaking Down the Premise
Posted by OtakuCultureDeepDive | April 22, 2026
Every so often, you come across a doujinshi or manga premise that stops you in your tracks. The title in question today is rough—we’ll call it "Irregular Gal Lets Me Use Her Pussy" (apologies for the crudeness, but accuracy matters in trope analysis).
On the surface, this sounds like standard low-effort ero-manga. But the key word here is "Irregular" (iribitari). Why that word? Why is the "gal" (gyaru) described as irregular, and why is the protagonist being allowed to use her body rather than a mutual scene?
Let’s break down the psycho-social appeal of this specific premise.
The Uncomfortable Truth
I have to address the elephant in the room: The phrase "manko" is intentionally vulgar, not romantic. This isn’t a love story. This is a power-fantasy transaction. The blogosphere often argues that such premises degrade women. Others counter that fictional kink is not real harm, provided all characters are adults (which, given "gal" typically implies high school age in manga, is legally and ethically problematic in many regions).
My take: As a reviewer of niche media, I can’t deny that this premise has an audience. But I also can’t ignore that 90% of "irregular gal" comics use the label to justify non-consensual or coercive setups. If you’re into this, ask yourself: Is the irregularity just a fetish, or is it exploring something real?