Kitsouille wrote:While I'm not complaining and actually very grateful, I always do wonder why artists do such things like zooming down the heroine (?)'s throat while she is falling down because I'm always assuming they don't have any vore or mouth fetish (unless it's Nintendo or Toriyama or something, those guys are suspicious). Is it because it's silly, cool, dynamic, comical, different/original, something else? And that's not just an innocent two second decision, people needed hours to add it in story boards, draw a couple frames, colouring them and animating them.
Sorry for not posting any links, those things don't pop out of thin air.
You have to remember that you are looking at it from a vorarephiliac's point of view. Most people don't have any particular feelings towards an open mouth. Whereas we would giggle and jump for joy when we see them most of the "normal" people tend to not really care. The same would go for these animators. They probably just see it as something that fits within the scene, either to show off their skills, to have a smooth transition from one scene to the next, because they feel it fits the style of their animation,...
So honestly I doubt it's because these animators are into vore. Vorarephilia really isn't that common a fetish. I could see one or two animators having it and fulfilling their fetish that way (I do find it suspicious that Spongebob and My Little Pony have a shit ton of uvulashots, but even then that could just be an animation choice that adds realism), but I think most of these scenes and zooms are made for other reasons.