Don't Meddle With My Daughter

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


Uchi no Musume ni Te o Dasu na! - Oyako Heroine Funtousu, (Localizated as Don't Meddle With My Daughter) is a manga by Nozumo Tamaki, the creator of Dance in the Vampire Bund.

The plot can be described as "What if Power Girl was Supergirl's mother and both of them lived in a world where the super-villains worked under hentai rules?". Starting off initially as a parody of the superhero (particularly of the Western variety) genre, it becomes a far more complicated story that walks a fine line between a serious drama and parodying the crap out of itself.

Interestingly enough, it's also a series that, while borderline porn, the first series with the main plot is mainstream serialized in Young Comic, though it's sequels (who are self-published as doujins) are outright hentai, and, unless Word of God says otherwise, Canon.

Since the story is continued directly with the hentai sequels (not mainstream published for obvious reasons), they and their tropes will be covered here as well.

Sequels of the main plot include: (all are Hentai)

  • Don't Meddle With My Uterus! (a Once More, with Clarity retrospective on a scene from the original series, only this time with all the Hentai scenes not included in the original).
  • MILF of Steel (a series of outtakes and bonus scenes giving us more retrospective looks into the past of some of the characters as well as some side stories taking place during and after the original series).
  • Amazing EIGHTH WONDER and Uncanny EIGHT WONDER (a pair of sequels set after the original story that serves as a direct followup).
Tropes used in Don't Meddle With My Daughter include:


  • Absolute Cleavage: Pretty much ALL the female characters have this.
  • Adorkable: Clara and Athena are both this. Must run in the family.
  • Adult Fear: It's why Athena wanted so badly to keep Clara from doing super hero work, and why she never told her about her past. Sexual Harassment and Rape are a very real danger for the women (and men) of this series. Athena herself went through some VERY horrific experiences that drove her to retire from super heroism, such as being gang-raped by countless numbers of villains when she was captured once, and witnessing her husband (seemingly) commit suicide to save the day (good news is, it turns out he didn't actually die, but still...)
  • Babies Ever After The subject of childbirth and raising children plays quite a role in this series, for heroes AND villains.
  • All Women Are Lustful: The series examines this trope from every angle.
    • It's deconstructed in that this isn't always portrayed as a good thing, and assumptions of such get the party in question who did so treated with appropriate disdain and disgust by the women accused as such. It's also shown to be an easy way to highlight some of the few openly repulsive characters are irredeemable, especially when they see women as nothing more than this trope with no respect for them as people.
    • It's also played straight for both the heroes and villains in different ways. Both Athena and Clara are shown to be sexually frustrated in different ways and find it hard to openly admit to. Most of the female villains typically play this trope different, not so much being sexually frustrated as their sexuality is a means of asserting their dominance and femininity on their own terms. This takes on a much darker, serious definition when we find out Zenovia was repeatedly raped, and her current day sexuality is her means of being able to exert her sexuality on her own terms.
  • Boobs of Steel: All the superpowered women in this series.
  • Butt Monkey: Poor Athena goes through a great many things in this series in her mixed efforts to be a loving mother, a hero, and to protect others including her daughter.
  • Complete Monster: While the series makes an explicit point that both heroes and villains are Not So Different aside from motivation. it does, however, lay explicit condemnation as evil at the feet of the REAL villains of the plot: the Government Conspiracy that literally raped the Moral Event Horizon, in the process of creating the heroes and villains, even doubling down and trying to sell the heroes out to the villains they created to save themselves from the wrath of the latter.
  • Crapsack World: There may be lots of people with super powers in this world, but make no mistake it's still VERY dangerous: Athena retired from super hero duty years prior to the story, because she was once captured by a villain who proceeded to have her raped repeatedly by himself AND countless numbers of her other enemies, and that doesn't even include the fact that Athena was also molested many times during her duties prior to that incident. In fact, at one point, Clara was inches and perhaps a second away from having the very same thing happen to her!
  • Deconstructor Fleet: This series rips down the pillars of practically everything it parodies, even Hentai, believe it or not.
  • Eldritch Abomination: Many of the villainous monsters look like they would be right at home in the Cthulhu stories.
  • Evil Costume Switch: The villains try invoking this trope on the heroes after occasional brainwashing a few times.
    • In one of the sequels, one character becomes far more competent after this occurs.
  • Evil Army: Blowjob (yes, that's their name), or so it seems (the evil army part, the name really IS actually that). They were originally meant to be a Super Soldiers project the government tried to pretend they had nothing to do with after all the monstrous things they did to create them blew up in their face. In fact, many get greatly humanized and shown to not be as "evil" as they look.
  • Expy: Eighth Wonder is effectively Superman Meets Wonder Woman.
  • Face Heel Turn: The backstory, ironically, of most of the villains.
  • Good Angel, Bad Angel: Parodied (like everything else} in Amazing EIGHTH WONDER.
  • Heel Face Revolving Door: Point Blank is in love with this trope, though it's entirely deliberate.
  • Heel Face Turn: A few of the villains do this. And thanks to some time travel weirdness, nearly all of them do by the end.
  • Hentai: The first 3 mangas are borderline, but after that it hops the border. Though that's not to say the plot diminishes in any way, because it still walks the lines of Porn with Plot and Plot with Porn.
  • Idiot Ball: The heroes and villains pass it around a lot with their mistakes and moments of very poor judgement.
  • Immodest Orgasm: Nooooobody has anything close to a modest orgasm in this series, but it's kind of justified in that: These are super heroes and villains, everything they DO is "super".
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Point Blank and many other villains are revealed to have only become villains, because they were born with super powers or mutations, but were thrown away by the government and had no other ways to survive than turning criminal.
  • Killed Mid-Sentence Several characters get offed like this.
  • Love Across Battlelines: Point Blank starts out as a villain serving Blowjob, but his rivalry/desire to defeat Athena actually develops into him starting to fall for her, and then when he gets sent into the past and meets her younger self, the two fall in love, marry, and Athena gets pregnant with his and her child: Clara, and then once he returns to the proper time with adult Athena, they stay together as a happy married couple.
  • Mama Bear: The ENTIRE PREMISE of the series (practically) revolves around this trope, with Clara being a rookie super hero and her mother doing all she can to try and protect her from the dangers and embarrassing situations that befell her in her days as a hero.
    • Papa Wolf: Not seen as much, but Point Blank is shown to have quite a temper when it comes to someone beating the shit out of his daughter.
  • MILF: Athena gets referred to this a LOT. It annoys her to no end.
    • DILF: Point Blank aka BM the Shooter aka Clara's dad. The is even MORE true thanks to Time Travel making him barely two years old physically to his own daughter.
  • Mood Whiplash: While the story does have genuine moments of light-heartedness and darkness that are treated with appropriate gravity, most of it ping pongs between the two extremes to the point it's hard to known when to laugh or cry early on in the main story. It gets more consistent later on as the overarching plot attains greater seriousness.
  • No One Else Is That Dumb: HOW does Clara not realize that her mother was the original 8th Wonder for so long? Did she just think her super powers came out of nowhere?
    • In fact this trope is kind of zigzagged, because not only is Clara dumb enough to not realize that Athena is the original 8th Wonder. But at the same time NOBODY else realizes the actual identities of ANY of the super heroes in the series despite there being literally NO difference in how they look aside from the clothes on their bodies. Clara's classmates (with one exception) don't know she's the 8th Wonder. Athena didn't know her daughter had taken up the mantle of 8th Wonder until after she'd been doing hero work for over a year!
  • Older Hero vs. Younger Villain: Athena VS Point Break. It gets even more complicated when time travel comes into play, and HE turns out to eventually become her husband AND the father of their daughter who is 2 years younger than he is.
  • Parental Incest: Two forms of this occur or seem to occur.
    • In the main series, Point Blank appears to be in this kind of relationship with his own mother, though given other context it's left vague just exactly how far this went, though it's pretty clearly a mutually received Oedipus Complex. Which, thanks to a fair amount of Timey Wimey Ball weirdness, the exact mechanics of this get quite confusing. Worse, he's not the only blood relation she winds up having sex with.
    • In the sequels, this kinda sorta happens between Athena and her own daughter, though the latter was being used as the proxy of another being, and any actual damage, either emotional or physical, is effectively negated at the end, though the latter still has to live the memories of being the party who did this to the former.
      • In general, this is seen in both main series and side story material from multiple characters, and it's NOT seen as healthy nor normal. Even some of the heroes are not immune to this trope and it's shown to be as disturbing as you'd think in practice.
  • Porn with Plot: The initial 3 volumes of the manga series are Plot with Porn, but after that it switches to this. However, that's not to say that the first 3 were explicit in that respect, just very close to the line.
  • Punch Clock Villain: Quite a few are villains are just trying to keep food on the table. It's revealed that this is why Zenovia came back to reform BlowJob after 18 years.
  • Quirky Household: It's one of the most complicated family trees this troper has ever seen.
  • Rape Is a Special Kind of Evil: The villains attempt this more than once, banking on this trope to be a form of Break the Badass. The failure of this tends to be glorious.
  • Reality Ensues: As part of the series desire to deconstruct its own premise, it does a lot of this trope. Superpowers have IRL upsides and downsides the series points out. Cliches from fiction that fail horribly IRL get lampshaded. The sheer difficulty of keeping a secret identity and related things secret in an era of YouTube and message boards is examined.
  • Shotacon: A bunch evil little boys try to rape Athena. It backfires pretty hard, with one explicitly later becoming The Atoner for his role in the attempt.
  • Shout Out There's no shortage of them in this series: DC (Superman, Justice League of America, Wonder Woman, Super Girl, Power Girl, Teen Titans to name a few...), Marvel (Amazing Spider-man, Captain America, (Uncanny) X-men, Avengers, Agents of SHIELD, the Hulk to name a few...), Ghostbusters, Back to the Future, My Hero Academia, Watchmen, Heavy Metal, Tank Girl, Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, Cutey Honey, Speed Racer, Power Rangers, Powerpuff Girls, Kamen Rider, Star Wars, Godzilla, King Kong, Cthulu Mythos, Greek Mythology, Charlie Chaplin, Lady Godiva (and Godiva Chocolates), Spartacus, Sailor Moon, Astro Boy, Doctor Who, Hanna-Barbera, The Impossibles, Totally Spies!, etc. Overall, the series is a huge parody/tribute to the entire super hero genre.
  • Some Anvils Need to Be Dropped: Rape is not a justifiable crime AT ALL, no matter what your motivations, and they don't just call out the obvious villains either.
    • When some of the "heroes" prove they aren't above this trope, the story makes it clear they've become just as horrible as the supposed villains if not worse.
    • Even the few times it could be justifiably seen as Pay Evil Unto Evil from certain points of view, the act itself is not seen as heroic nor laudable.
  • Their First Time: This series may hold a record for some of the most complicated "losing one's virginity" stories ever.
  • Trap Master: Blowjob seems to consist of many of these, because several of their plans involve traps set against the heroes. (Much to Athena's annoyance, especially.)
  • Uncanny Family Resemblance: Clara looks almost exactly like Athena did at her age... Except that Athena is shown to have had larger breasts even back then, compared to Clara.
  • Villains Act, Heroes React: Majority of the events of the story are initiated by the villains, and the heroes responding to them.
  • Wake Up, Go to School, Save the World: Deconstructed. Clara is shown to go through the motions of this trope, and all the realities of doing so in practice are lampshaded.
  • What the Hell, Hero?:
  • Whole Plot Reference: Given this is a parody of western superheroes, the plots of Superman and Wonder Woman are more or less given a Revision in this parody as plot elements.
    • One of the main villains of the main series is, in part, playing out the motives and backstory of Queen Beryl.
  • World of Action Girls: Pretty much all the girls in this universe kick some serious ass. Good and bad.
  • World of Badass: Super heroes are practically EVERYWHERE in this world. It's not that everyone HAS powers, but a high number seem to.
  • World of Buxom: Super powers aren't the only thing that seem to be common for women in this series...
  • World of Cardboard Speech: After Clara goes on a rampage, the news is rather brutal about how super heroes are dangerous if left unchecked and how dangerous they are.
  • Would Hit a Girl: The villains (and technically heroes) in this, whether male or female have NO qualms about hitting anyone that's in their way.
  • Would Hurt a Child: It comes up a few times, with both heroes AND villains having to deal with it.
    • Heroes - Athena is assaulted and raped by a group of super powered young boys, but instead of flat out kicking their asses, she outsmarts them and captures them without having to resort to brute force. It even serves to reform them into seeking to become proper heroes. It also plays a key part in the plot as a whole, because Athena spares the life of the main villain years prior to the story, because she realized she (the villain) was pregnant at the time. As it turns out, THAT very baby would grow up to be the man who was her husband, thanks to some time travel events, and thus had she killed the villain at that time, she'd have killed her husband AND their daughter Clara (whom Athena was pregnant with at that same time).
    • Villains - At least 2 of the villains are young child prodigies who build elaborate mechs and machines to do their bidding. There's also the government having forced the main villain to have sex with creatures and villainous beings explicitly so they could impregnate her and then the government would take the babies from her and experiment on them to try and turn them into living weapons.
  • X-Ray Vision: One of the 8th Wonder's powers is "Super Senses" which enhances the user's hearing and eyesight to where she can see through anything, even solid steel.
  • Zipperiffic_ Some of the costumes are covered with zippers.