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  • Fansadox/Training My Slave-Girl
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  • Training my Slave-Girl is a Takamura creation (illustrated by Badia) in the Fansadox franchise. The series is about Robert T. Wilson, a psycho who abducts women for sexual pleasure. His partner in crime becomes Angela, a horny woman worse than Robert himself who discovers his little kink and decided to help him out, all for a profit.
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abstract
  • Training my Slave-Girl is a Takamura creation (illustrated by Badia) in the Fansadox franchise. The series is about Robert T. Wilson, a psycho who abducts women for sexual pleasure. His partner in crime becomes Angela, a horny woman worse than Robert himself who discovers his little kink and decided to help him out, all for a profit. The series contains two novels, which claim to be based on a real story on the notes of the real Robert T. Wilson. At the end of the second story, it cryptically states "The facts don't end here. Robert T. Wilson wrote a fourth and fifth journal... Please help us to find them." The story has also been adapted (somewhat pragmatically) in two illustrated novels/Webcomics, #123 - Snatched Model and #128 - Top Model's Hell. The female protagonist here is a blonde model, and the man is "Ali", a generic Arab. * Abhorrent Admirer: Robert. * Acceptable Targets: For the comic, Arabs, models and lesbian models. * Adaptation Decay: The main character of the webcomic is the Arab shop owner that sells Robert tools of the trade and someone Robert actually hates the guts out of. The main character isn't a bitchy everygirl, but a model. And she also has an interesting relationship with another model. * Adaptation-Induced Plothole: What exactly does an Arab has with a blonde model to treat her like this is anyone's guess. Why he wears a Batman mask is even weirder. Without the dynamics between Robert and Marianne, the story just presents the Arab as a sadist for sadism's sake (although this wouldn't be too much of a stretch). * Ain't Too Proud to Beg. * All Take and No Give: Robert accuses Marianne of this. Robert: You're spoiled, you're a stupid good for nothing. Your time of eating and drinking and dressing for free is over. Where do you think the money came from for that suit you're wearing? Or for your lovely collection of shoes, or for your vibrators? * Ascended Extra: The Arab that tortures the model in the adaptation is very possibly the one that Robert buys his "toys" from, who has limited appearances in the novel, only to show how homophobic Robert is. * Asian Store Owner. * Berserk Button: Robert loves pushing these on Marianne and punishing her when she reacts. * Break the Haughty: At least from Robert's POV. * Cool and Unusual Punishment. * Cold-Blooded Torture: 'course. * Cosplay: Robert feels more powerful when dressing up as Batman. * Crying Wolf: Doubles as a strange case of Did Not Eat the Mousse: Marianne's father reported her missing often to get the police to find her. This leeds to the otherwise natural scene where, when she really gets kidnapped, the police officer is just running through routine and doesn't actively search for suspects or foul play. Or notice that guy that just pissed his pants. * Fate Worse Than Death: Marianne often comments that, if there's a hell, it can't be worse than where she's been. * Fictional Document: Both books are actually Robert's notes on the matter, and inserted in them chronologically (presumably after he finds them on Marianne) are part of Marianne's makeshift journal. * Also the SS manual on torture. * For Dummies: The SS manual Robert uses to break Marianne seems to be this, considering Robert... * High Octane Nightmare Fuel: Marianne's ordeals. * Home Porn Movie: Robert films Marianne's rapes, then makes her watch. May have been suggested by his SS manual. * Inferiority Superiority Complex: Robert outright proclaims this. * Jaded Washout: Robert is this, and fully accepts it. In books 2 and 3, he thinks he got out of this trope, but starts to realise not much has changed in his outside world life, and blames it on "Batman". * Loves My Alter Ego: Robert fears the respect he's getting when putting on the Batman suit is becoming more prominent than Robert T. Wilson. * Mad Scientist: Angela has shades of this. * Made a Slave. * Most Annoying Sound: Played for laughs with Angela's... laughter. * Played for drama with the siren Robert keeps turning on. * Police Are Useless: For now, they struck out twice. First, justified by a Crying Wolf father. Second, they went right after the legitimate boyfriend. * Politically-Incorrect Villain: Robert: Where to begin... * Punk in the Trunk: Played for absolute drama (and a bit of Black Comedy for the perpetrators): Marianne is put in a trunk, bound in latex and locked there for 24 straight hours, put straws down her throat so she won't suffocate and injected with a cocktail that'll keep her awake the entire trip. * Rape as Drama. * Rape Is Love: Robert actually expresses his love this way. And sometimes his hate. * "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Marianne gives Robert a heart-chilling one at the end of book two, expecting to be killed for it but frankly not caring anymore. * Secret Keeper: Angela becomes this to Robert, as well as one of the few stability pillars for his ever-increased erratic actions. She started as a Secret Secret Keeper. * Small Name, Big Ego: Robert T. Wilson starts thinking himself as the fulfilled superhero he dresses up in, and writes his name with pride in the fictional document in which he records his deeds. * Stalker with a Crush: Robert especially with "Negrita". * Start of Darkness: Robert's in the first book. * Torture Technician: Using a For Dummies book. * Villain Protagonist: Robert. * Villainous Breakdown: Apparently at the end of book 2. * Wig, Dress, Accent: Robert describes using the first two masterfully, although from what we know of him (and the fact that Negrita recognised him), it was probably a Paper-Thin Disguise. * You Fail Biology Forever: Averted by Angela in-world: she's a veterinarian and she knows how to keep her pets alive.