>>99964939As an unironic NTR enjoyer, I want to set the record straight: If this is what you call "NTR" then you have no fucking clue what NTR is.
The basis for good NTR is the depth and richness of the relationship between the couple going in. It becomes part of the narrative to watch how the relationship transforms and evolves, and the emotions those changes evoke in the characters.
Frankly, a parasocial relationship between a streamer and the audience, even if it's "GFE", is just fucking shit-tier. There's zero fucking depth to it. The girl obviously doesn't care about the audience other than as a source of income (or she wouldn't be doing that shit). The audience only has two states: 1) they believe the girl and lap up the GFE uncritically, 2) they think the girl is cheating them and turn into rabid haters.
In good NTR, there's a rich narrative where you see how the cheater's dependency and emotional intimacy with the partner gradually declines because they are meeting those needs elsewhere. At some point, they start feeling shame or guilt that impacts their capacity to even be intimate with the main partner. And the partner needs to experience this gradual slipping of the ties that bind, for unexplained reasons. It's not simply a "detective puzzle" of a paranoid schizo trying to prove they're cheating. The partner should be trying to address the problems in the relationship up until they point they are too broken and give up.
Stop calling this shit NTR. Be honest, this is just a fucking "cancel culture" narrative. Yeah, you're cancelling her for a reason you feel is justified, but frankly literally every cancellation is like that. You should be comparing yourself to pulp fiction like The Ink Black Heart and not classics like My Girlfriend's Not Here Today.