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Anonymous
A) For me, it really depends on how it sounds in its literal context. Some expressions just sound better to me, like "hungry for cock" more than "hungry for penis" or "warm cunt" more than "warm pussy". I tend to prefer words that have a softer sound, like "manhood", "cock" or "shaft" instead of "penis" and "slit", "mound" or "hole" instead of "cunt" or "pussy". I think the strong-sounding terms distract from the meaning, and in this sense metaphors would also be something I'd prefer. I'll use those strong-sounding words only in very particular context, such as in or around the climax, or maybe when dealing with humiliation stuff.
B) Some fetishes are hard or even impossible to illustrate, so that would require some level of textual explanation. Good story and exciting dialogue tend to enhance the experience, but text that is too long, too bland or too cliché tends to make me ignore it
C) I like stuff to start FAST. I don't want to walk through pages and pages of introductory content unless it is important enough to the story and the suspense that it capts my attention. For example, if you had a manga that had a guy transform into a girl in the first page, it would be less exciting because it would be as if he never was a boy in the first place.
D) If the character has any remarkable traits, manners and personality, readers tend to attach themselves to them more. If they're just generic human beings, not so much.
E) I don't think there are any limits to how fantastic or unrealistic, as long as you have a decent "in-world" explanation, or in other words, as long as the universe of the story is coherent and believable.
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