Being made to keep coming past the point you'd normally stop — pre-agreed, with a safe word.
What forced orgasm (consensual play) is really about
Control. Control games — orders, permission, denial — work because they concentrate attention. One person's world narrows to following; the other's to leading. The paradox everyone eventually learns: the person surrendering control chooses to, continuously, and can un-choose at any moment.
Start with control of something small: what they wear, when they may speak
Denial amplifies everything that comes after it
The controlling partner's real job is noticing — watch more than you command
Safety: Control play needs a safeword or safe-signal that instantly ends the game, honored without commentary.
Dominance. Dominance is a service kink wearing a crown. The dominant partner runs the scene, which means holding the plan, reading their partner continuously, and making surrender feel safe enough to be fun. It's leadership with the stakes turned up.
Plan three beats for a scene: an opening move, a middle, an ending
Praise and command in the same breath — 'good, now…'
Debrief every scene while it's fresh: what landed, what didn't
Submission. Submission is frequently misread as passivity when it's closer to athletics — sustained attention, trust under load, and the discipline of yielding on purpose. Many submissives describe it as the quietest their mind ever gets.
Define what submission means for THIS scene: service? obedience? endurance?
Rate your headspace 1–10 when asked — it gives your dominant instruments to fly with
Notice what you need afterward and say it plainly
Sensation play. Sensation play is the umbrella for anything that makes skin the main event — fingertips, breath, temperature, texture, pressure. It rewards slowing down: the nervous system reads anticipation as intensity, so the pause before contact often lands harder than the contact itself.
Alternate textures (nails, silk, ice, breath) rather than repeating one
Ask for a running 'warmer/colder' from your partner the first time
Try it blindfolded once — removing sight roughly doubles everything else
Find out if your partner is into it — without asking awkwardly
Yes. Interest in forced orgasm (consensual play) shows up across every demographic in sexuality research. The only requirements are consenting adults and honest communication.
How do I tell my partner I'm into forced orgasm (consensual play)?
Outside the bedroom, low stakes: "I read about forced orgasm (consensual play) and it stuck with me — curious what you think?" A compatibility checklist you both fill out privately (like Kinda Into That) removes the awkwardness entirely: you only see where you overlap.
What if my partner isn't into it?
A no to one item is not a no to you. Compare full lists instead of litigating one kink — most couples find more overlap than they expected, and the misses matter less next to the hits.