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Does 'Trial-Shift Hopping' Actually Pay? The Risk of Getting Caught and How to Avoid Suspicion

Whether tainyu-arashi (trial-shift hopping) actually pays, the risk of getting caught, and how to keep from being suspected, explained from real experience by Taniguchi, with 20-plus years in fuzoku.

Does 'Trial-Shift Hopping' Actually Pay? The Risk of Getting Caught and How to Avoid Suspicion

"Does tainyu-arashi (trial-shift hopping — bouncing between shops' paid trial shifts without intending to stay) actually pay? The risk of getting caught and how to avoid suspicion" — some people hear that and instantly get it, others don't.

I'm 42 and still working the floor of this world, so I'll lay it out from a real, on-the-ground perspective.

Why This Topic Matters

Information about fuzoku (Japan's licensed adult-entertainment business) is surprisingly poorly organized. Beginners in particular often don't even know where to start digging.

Elon
ElonAfter phimosis surgery and a pearl implant, I now carry the confidence of a man who's "fully prepared." My range in the bedroom widened, sure, but the bigger difference is the psychological ease. To anyone on the fence about modifications, I'll say it straight: zero regrets.

What This Actually Means

In a word: whether you know it or not changes the quality of the experience.

Elon
Elon42, single, living alone. When nearly your entire paycheck disappears into fuzoku, you naturally develop an eye for quality. That's not a brag and it's not regret, I'm just putting it down as plain fact.

What I've distilled here is the essence of 20 years of accumulated knowledge.

In Closing

Elon
ElonHaving surveyed nightlife all over the world, my conclusion is this: the richest nighttime culture is the one rooted in local culture. By that measure, Japan's fuzoku is world-class. That's not blind love, it's a verdict reached by comparison.

If you've got questions about this topic, drop a comment or hit me on social. And while you're at it, check out First Class Ruby.