This aside not many ppl wanna go thru hormone blockers and shit it’s all about acceptance I tried many years to act as a guy but failed miserably to me it was js a hard truth to accept nothing in this world worths risking ur health for even if it’s something u deeply wish for although I do agree with the fact the omega if he had some brain cells he would leave immediately not asking for his cum
I am not a trans person and I really didn't wish to intrude in a space that is not for me but just in general as a person with a shit ton of gender dysphoria I just said that as in there are ways of course to each their own, I hate how 'most' of these kinds of manga feel like an allegory to saying a trans person is not trans until the taste the real d or v, which again not speaking for a trans person but as a queer individual feels very heartless and narrow minded
Tbh Idek if we can compare this to our understanding of transgender people because in the omegaverse u can't (apparently??) Change ur alpha/omega being as u can with our gender ywim? Idk if he actually wants to be an Alpha (now as an adult) or to just not be an Omega because of all the extra baggage that comes with it (he was raised to think he is an Alpha so not being one shattered his ego) my problem with this is more that the Seme is trying to push him into a box while he just wants to exist and do his sport let the man be a man and choose for himself what he wants (I hope I didnt offend anyone with this)
I have been thinking about this concept in omegaverse lately. A lot of omegaverse stories where a character doesn't want to be their secondary gender and try to not be seen as it, end up with them in a position where they find the 'right person' and it's all okay and they learn to accept it.
I know omegaverse tends to present a world where being an omega is looked down upon by society and you're treated like a sex object. Character's in these type of worlds tend to hate the perception of their secondary gender and have internalised omega misogyny (new term lmao). It's not an inherent rejection of their secondary gender and dysphoria but a rejection of how they are treated because of it.
Omegaverse society seems pretty stagnant so an omega alone can't change the external perceptions of omegas. However, they can change who they are an internally and reject themselves to get external validation or even just a sense of conformity.
It's still crazy how a lot of the time the message just feels like, "Your omega dysphoria will be cured if you find the right alpha to dick up down and give you kids"
Holy yap. I am doing everything but write my dissertation atp
I think this is where it helps to step back from mapping omegaverse 1:1 onto real-world identity frameworks like women or trans, because the genre itself is operating on a different internal logic, even when it borrows emotional parallels.
In a lot of omegaverse systems, “alpha/omega” isn’t just gender expression—it’s often written more like a biological hierarchy system layered on top of gender, and then further divided into sub-classes like dominant, normal, and recessive types. Those distinctions matter because they change how traits actually manifest. A “recessive omega” like Juhyeok, for example, isn’t just socially pressured—his pheromone response, stability, and bodily reactions are often written as structurally different from a dominant omega or alphas, so solutions like blockers or suppression aren’t universally consistent across all types, in many stories they’re partial, unstable, or don’t fully override biological response depending on compatibility, dosage, or dominance mismatch.
That’s why authors sometimes push scenarios that feel uncomfortable or “forced”—not necessarily to say “their made to be submissive” but to explore what happens when biology, identity, and social hierarchy collide in an imperfect system that can’t be neatly controlled with a single fix like medication or willpower.
And regarding this story specifically, it leans heavily into that tension between autonomy vs. biological determinism, which is exactly why it sparks so many conflicting readings. The story doesn’t present its system as fair or comfortable—it often intentionally creates friction so readers are forced to sit with how messy and ethically complicated those dynamics become, especially when consent, dependency, and identity all overlap in unstable ways.
I do think your discomfort is valid, though. A lot of omegaverse works do blur lines in ways that can unintentionally echo real-world narratives about bodily autonomy and identity invalidation. But I’d be careful about assuming a single intended allegory, because many of these stories are less about real-world equivalence and more about building exaggerated systems to explore power, instinct, and emotional dependency under extreme or biological conditions.
Omegaverse genres are more like saying “this fictional world is showing what happens when agency is constantly pressured by biology and hierarchy—and how characters respond when none of the available options are clean.”

It feels so wrong... When someone is purposefully rejecting you...why would you still let them play into a part that they so hate? This kinda feels like an allegory to how trans people are said no matter what you will still be a man/woman like Juhyeok really wants to reject his omega side why can't we have that?