
The 16Kinks Framework: Four Dimensions, Two Layers, Sixteen Types
Why percentages don’t work, how we built a two-layer typology from real research, and what your four-letter code actually means.

Why percentages don’t work, how we built a two-layer typology from real research, and what your four-letter code actually means.

Orgasm control is the umbrella term for the whole toolbox — edging, denial, ruined orgasms, chastity, scheduled release, forced orgasms, tease and denial, permission protocols. Most SERP pieces collapse it to one sub-practice. The load-bearing structure is role asymmetry: the controller’s labor is calibration, attention, timing, accountability; the controlled’s labor is endurance, honest reporting, trust, and asking. Plus the inverse practice (forced orgasm as same role-labor in opposite direction) and the scaling question (single session vs lifestyle arrangement).

Three things get called “tease” — personality flirtation, scene element, and kink-Dom architecture where suspense is the engine. The two-scene contrast that separates them, plus the brat-tamer differentiation and a give-side how-to-ask script.

A developmental map for the rope-bottom identity — six phases (plus a half-step at community contact), the typical stall at each, the scene-check from a first tie, and the bunny → bottom → partner language shift the community is going through.

Four objections that have intellectual weight, the structural rebuttal (Aggrawal forensic-medicine + Hawkinson & Zamboni community survey), an honest read on the trauma question, and a three-move partner-disclosure script. Brand-risk piece — steelman before rebuttal.

“Mind games” covers four distinct kink shapes — mindfuck/predicament, humiliation, brat-taming, emotional dominance. The four archetypes side-by-side, the shared mechanism, the structural test that separates kink from manipulation.

Most rough sex isn’t kink. Vanilla rough is a dial; kink rough is a frame. The single test that separates them, five shapes the same word hides, and four mistakes on each side of the strike.

Most “am I into CNC” pieces stop at reassurance. The real diagnostic isn’t fantasy intensity — it’s willingness to learn three specific skills. The data resolving the “does this mean I want it for real” fear, the three-skill stack, and the trauma-survivor carve-out.

If you want to come, why ask your partner to make you wait? Because the orgasm was never the goal — the state right before it is. The diagnostic for whether the edging pull is yours, the cleanest tell apart from performance anxiety, and three shapes the same pull takes.

Impact play is a practice with a craft and a consent structure. Five things it isn’t — abuse, self-harm, trauma reenactment, just liking pain, broad masochism — before defining what it is.

Degradation gets used four different ways across registers — clinical, scene-scoped, frame-thick, and non-kink-abusive. The honest map, three fears, and the structural test that tells kink apart from abuse.

Praise kink is the erotic charge of being recognized by someone you’ve made yourself vulnerable to. Not approval-hunting, not littlespace, not soft-BDSM. Three fears, one self-check, and the disambiguation no one writes.