>>2818973Just in terms of the story structure and my own 'preferences', here's how I'd write an ENF-themed groundhog's day loop:
She's going about something routine and uninteresting when she unexpectedly suffers a spectacular and highly public wardrobe malfunction. Goes to bed that night dreading the next day, but wakes up the previous morning instead. Despite not comprehending what's going on, she's overjoyed to have a second chance at avoiding humiliation and makes sure to do so, only to fall victim to a different incident and find herself in another loop. This repeats until I run out of ideas to write about. Then at last, after a great many loops and enduring truly phenomenal embarrassment, she finally makes it through an entire loop without being exposed even once, and wakes up the next morning. While enjoying the euphoria of release, she slowly realizes that somehow the events of every single previous loop really happened, and everyone else remembers it just like she does at this point I might have some sort of "time police" show up to try to fix the damage she's done to causality by being seen naked in a dozen places at once, or maybe she just becomes the central figure in a fantastically promising and extremely embarrassing field of theoretical research into causality. Or it could just cut off with no explanation whatsoever. Possible variations on all of this could include: each incident is related somehow to her efforts to avoid the previous one, or else they're apparently unrelated and increasingly improbable, until it becomes 'Final Destination' style. Or instead of simply avoiding embarrassment, she discovers early on that the only way to do so is if she arranges for another girl to be exposed in her place, and in the next loop she wakes up as that girl and has to 'pass the buck' again. In any variant, ideally the final loop would involve a ludicrously complicated series of extraordinary efforts to turn embarrassing disasters into near-misses.