Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-30662466-20181017215538/@comment-37309778-20181026154033

Dhampir seem pretty close to humans in behavior and tend to work as “vampire hunters” 

Doppelganger could definitely work since they act basically identically to an existing human with the caveat that they are in love with a different person

Salamander only attack men who are warriors and decide their husband based on who they consider to be an equal rival to them.

There are those monsters which hold positions of power and thus likely have their choice of men making it more likely they get to know men to try and make a good choice: Shirohebi, Otohime, Inari, and Ryu.

'''A list of monsters that sort of work because they don’t actively seduce humans but whose career consists of serving their “master” so i’m not sure if that counts as really having a seperate career. Automaton, Kikimora, Ochimusha, and the servants of Eros'''

'''Succubus Notebook (one of the canon side books) suggests what you want may actually occur even in the sex crazed races. It mentions that occasionally there will be succubi who are obsessed with something other than sex, though they still have a strong desire for sex it gets filtered through their passion, such as a succubus who is obsessed with learning magic falling in love with a powerful wizard. It also suggests that succubi spend a decent amount of time finding men and then seducing the men into wanting the succubi (usually while disguised as a human woman), so getting to know the person they want to be their husband seems pretty common. Further it suggests that most of the instinctual behavior of monster species comes from the fact that before being given succubus demon energy the monsters really were basically animals and thus lacked any sort of  culture even after having their intelligence improved, so it would fall within canon to have even one of the sex crazed species to act far more like a normal person simply because it was raised in an established town surrounded by people who could teach it how to act properly.'''