The work itself is likely mediocre art, standard fetish plotting, and forgettable outside its niche. But its persistence in search logs reminds us that fandom is not just about celebrating canon. It’s also about breaking it, twisting it, and sometimes — for better or worse — tarnishing it. Whether you find that fascinating or repulsive decides whether you open the door to Comiket’s darkest rooms.
: If you are looking for high-quality Naruto fanworks that honor Tsunade’s strength, seek out non-explicit doujinshi by circles like Sumi Norio or Takemura Sesshu . Leave the “inchiryou” genre to the archives where it belongs. Disclaimer: This article is for informational and cultural analysis purposes only. It does not host, link to, or condone the distribution of adult content. The author has no connection to the circle “Naruhodou Naruhodo” or the work described. Always comply with local laws regarding adult media. c72 naruhodou naruhodo tsunade no inchiryou naruto work
However, ignoring the existence of such works does not erase them. Academic fandom studies (e.g., Henry Jenkins, Mizuko Ito) argue that even problematic doujinshi serve a purpose: they reveal how fans negotiate power, body image, and taboo desires in a legally safe sandbox away from corporate oversight. The work itself is likely mediocre art, standard
: Comiket 72 (August 17–19, 2007)
The plot (as described in archived Japanese doujinshi catalogs) follows a standard adult parody template: Tsunade, the legendary sannin and world’s greatest medical ninja, undergoes a “routine examination” that escalates into non-consensual or coercive acts. The title uses inchiryou (淫治療) — a fusion of “淫” (lewdness) and “治療” (treatment) — a tag that signals a fetishistic genre where medical authority is weaponized for explicit scenarios. Whether you find that fascinating or repulsive decides
: Naruhodou Naruhodo (a now-inactive or pseudonymous artist)