Faptacular: @bAv-R34: Yeah I don't get it either. I've heard people say it's a power thing but I just don't see it.
When I see it all I'm seeing is sadism, gore, snuff and cannibalism. (I consider any sentient being eating another cannibalism just to let literalfags know ahead of time.)
PinkBallons: @bAv-R34: From what I've seen, some of those who are into vore enjoy it under the context that the eaten party survives the journey unharmed; they like the thought of being wholly a part of someone or something else. I can understand that to some extent, but not so much that I find it hot (mostly because the immunity to digestion makes no goddamn sense).
However, images like the one above, wherin the person being eaten is doomed to the worst death I can imagine? No idea.
Voslar: @bAv-R34: @Faptacular: I can actually enjoy some soft vore from time to time - the type that pretty well implies it's all non-fatal, not-terrifying for the insertee, and ignores... ya know... some physical realities that make such things quite thoroughly impossible. (Hey, suspension of disbelief.)
Unbirth is actually something I tend to enjoy in particular, because it can be used almost symbolically to represent maternal warmth and love. It can be used as an expression of trust, in giving the unbirther complete and total control of the unbirthee. It plays to the instinctive male desire to, well, 'get in there' - in this case, quite completely. It supports feminine power fantasies in that the unbirther is very much the party with all the power in this scenario. And lastly, as the womb is something associated with giving life rather than taking it, it's much easier to rationalize it as a safe or even somehow empowering act.
This, though... yeah, I got no idea what's appealing about it at all. At all.
Nuxersopus: ...maybe having a beautiful person to be their prey? Having so much control over them that you can even eat them. Like the biggest sign of dominance there is. Maybe even mixed with them becoming a part of you forever, though that thought alone is already pretty mental.
bAv-R34: @Nuxersopus: Technically the shit you digest doesn't "become part of you forever", instead you absorb the nutrients such as iron, protein, vitamins/minerals, etc. and you burn/use the energy as you live on with your day. In a sense, you may have "X becoming part of Y", but it'll last one or two days at best.
If it were true, however, you'd literally be what you eat.
bAv-R34: @bAv-R34: Not to mention the stuff you can't digest, such as fibre [or in this case, bones] would just go right through the digestive tract unscathed.
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When I see it all I'm seeing is sadism, gore, snuff and cannibalism. (I consider any sentient being eating another cannibalism just to let literalfags know ahead of time.)
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However, images like the one above, wherin the person being eaten is doomed to the worst death I can imagine? No idea.
Unbirth is actually something I tend to enjoy in particular, because it can be used almost symbolically to represent maternal warmth and love. It can be used as an expression of trust, in giving the unbirther complete and total control of the unbirthee. It plays to the instinctive male desire to, well, 'get in there' - in this case, quite completely. It supports feminine power fantasies in that the unbirther is very much the party with all the power in this scenario. And lastly, as the womb is something associated with giving life rather than taking it, it's much easier to rationalize it as a safe or even somehow empowering act.
This, though... yeah, I got no idea what's appealing about it at all. At all.
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If it were true, however, you'd literally be what you eat.
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