
A church where the sacrament is milk and the priestesses serve their goddess by pressing their colossal blessings against the altar. Solemn, ritualistic, absurd, sensual — a long ringo fantasy in service of one very specific devotion.

A Japanese office worker named Tsuda ends up sharing her apartment with Akane, a curious android who calls her Master, asks too many questions about human bodies, and tries to figure out what their relationship is by experimenting. Does It Count If Your First Time Is With An Android is a Japanese yuri manga that runs a comedic adult romance through the half-comfortable, half-bewildered grammar of a woman teaching a machine what intimacy feels like, with the kind of dry humor that lands harder because the punchline is genuine affection.

Year 20XX. Two genetically identical operators meet in a glassed-off training cell, hair braided the same way, latex suits zipped tight, ordered to settle which body the program keeps. A long, slick sci-fi mirror-match from ringo.

Two wives. One husband. A 100-round private war waged in silk dresses, then stockings, then nothing at all. A long, sweat-soaked ringo piece about pride, possession, and refusing to surrender first.

After-hours in the empty infirmary, the beds officially "for sick and injured students only" — two girls settle a score the only way they know how. A long, ice-cold ringo showdown about pride, jealousy, and refusing to be the one who breaks first.

A long, intimate ringo piece — two girls who shouldn't want each other this much tangled together in a low-lit room, repeating each other's names like a vow they're both afraid to break.

Years after high school art club, two would-be painters reunite around the same crush — and discover the bigger canvas was always each other. Who's prettier? Who's the fake? Neither knows, but they're going to figure it out the hardest way.

A two-volume descent in three verbs: steal, break, devour. A predator who won't take "no" and a prey who learns her own body answers anyway. Heavy, dark, deliberately uncomfortable. Reader discretion advised.

A blonde Korean woman keeps wrapping a redhead in arms neither of them was supposed to want, across apartments, shrines, and quiet rooms where the pretending falls apart faster every time. Distorted Love by Sowol is a Korean yuri pornhwa about a relationship that bends harder the longer it lasts, full-color webtoon with explicit intimate scenes that the series treats as the architecture of the romance rather than as decoration. Adult, possessive, and one of the most-searched Korean GL titles in English right now.

A young man's new stepmother brings her circle of friends home for the summer, and the older women start trading wine, gossip, and slow-burning curiosity about each other. What begins as patio teasing turns into bunny costumes, late-night roleplay, and naked sunsets between the friends themselves.

Haegu lives between a car crash she cannot forget and a woman named Mian whose drinking nights keep curdling into something neither of them can name. Kill Me Now is a Korean yuri manhwa that runs a thriller on the same pages as the romance, knives, hunting scenes, and apartment kitchens all carrying the same weight as the intimate ones. Long-form, full-color, adult, and structured like several seasons of the same show stacked on top of each other.

A sun-coded blonde princess named Charlotte gets pinned in a palace corridor by a white-haired wolf shapeshifter who scents her once and refuses to share. The Wolf Steals The Sun runs the beast-girl-meets-princess pairing without flinching, full-color fantasy yuri manhwa about possessive courtship, sharp teeth, and a princess who stops running. Adult, explicit, and one of the few Korean GL titles to commit to the fantasy register the way it deserves.