I tend to analyze stories like puzzles, so I notice patterns: female domination can show up as social authority, sexual dominance, or psychological warfare, and each creates different arcs. For instance, in 'Kakegurui' the domination is performative and strategic; the female leads wield it like a weapon, and secondary characters either adapt by becoming more calculating or collapse. That trajectory — adaptation, resistance, transformation — is satisfying because it maps power onto personality change rather than static swagger.
Contrast that with 'Nana to Kaoru', where domination is a slow personal education. The dominant partner's behaviour forces the other to confront insecurities, and the arc is mutual: dominance becomes a language for intimacy. 'Prison School' is messier; its domination leans into ridicule and fetish, but some characters still undergo noticeable changes in confidence, guilt, or empathy. When I recommend titles to friends I flag whether the domination is consensual, psychological, humiliating, or empowering, because those distinctions shape character arcs. If you're curious beyond manga, I also
find novels and indie comics that treat domination as emotional negotiation — they often dig deeper into consent and consequence than mainstream erotic manga. Personally, I appreciate stories where power is negotiated over time rather than handed down like a decree.