Question: would anyone be interested in me doing a review for Changed here? I mean, it doesn't quite have the typical tranny shit in it - it's a furfag game about a child getting gang-raped, though there is some gender change shit in it - but the game is still disgusting enough that I think it might have a spot on the list.
Question: would anyone be interested in me doing a review for Changed here? I mean, it doesn't quite have the typical tranny shit in it - it's a furfag game about a child getting gang-raped, though there is some gender change shit in it - but the game is still disgusting enough that I think it might have a spot on the list.
Question: would anyone be interested in me doing a review for Changed here? I mean, it doesn't quite have the typical tranny shit in it - it's a furfag game about a child getting gang-raped, though there is some gender change shit in it - but the game is still disgusting enough that I think it might have a spot on the list.
Regretfully, no; the entire game is basically just one long line of child porn. It's not subtle, either; Colin - the protagonist who's "officially" supposed to be an adult, but in looks, demeanor, and in earlier versions of the game is 15 at the oldest and might be even younger - is just some unlucky sod who woke up in a lab one day, and now has to haul ass away from a bunch of sex-crazed furries that're hellbent on raping him. The death animations are disgusting enough - most of the poses and scenes are outright fetishistic - but the narrator text outright confirms that the kid's getting penetrated in various ways by the furfags, not helped by the difficulty making it hard to avoid any of this. Coupled with the author being a known pedophile, it's one hell of a trashfire.
It'll take a bit of time to get a review about the whole game up; it's still getting updates adding content, and I'll be breaking down as much as I can (stomach) for the review. So... look forward to that, I guess?
Regretfully, no; the entire game is basically just one long line of child porn. It's not subtle, either; Colin - the protagonist who's "officially" supposed to be an adult, but in looks, demeanor, and in earlier versions of the game is 15 at the oldest and might be even younger - is just some unlucky sod who woke up in a lab one day, and now has to haul ass away from a bunch of sex-crazed furries that're hellbent on raping him. The death animations are disgusting enough - most of the poses and scenes are outright fetishistic - but the narrator text outright confirms that the kid's getting penetrated in various ways by the furfags, not helped by the difficulty making it hard to avoid any of this. Coupled with the author being a known pedophile, it's one hell of a trashfire.
It'll take a bit of time to get a review about the whole game up; it's still getting updates adding content, and I'll be breaking down as much as I can (stomach) for the review. So... look forward to that, I guess?
It's a pretty notorious game, surprisingly so considering that none of what @Scream Aim Fire said is an exaggeration. The dev even has a thread here. The better question would be "How is this game so popular?" (as in, popular at ALL).
It's a pretty notorious game, surprisingly so considering that none of what @Scream Aim Fire said is an exaggeration. The dev even has a thread here. The better question would be "How is this game so popular?" (as in, popular at ALL).
Question: would anyone be interested in me doing a review for Changed here? I mean, it doesn't quite have the typical tranny shit in it - it's a furfag game about a child getting gang-raped, though there is some gender change shit in it - but the game is still disgusting enough that I think it might have a spot on the list.
It's a pretty notorious game, surprisingly so considering that none of what @Scream Aim Fire said is an exaggeration. The dev even has a thread here. The better question would be "How is this game so popular?" (as in, popular at ALL).
Regretfully, I've already typed it out; my bad! Got all this in a few hours, too; don't know what that says about me, frankly...
Changed: Heavy, and probably one of the worst on the internet.
So, bit different from the usual games focusing on troonery and anti-white crap, but I wanted to bring this one to light, as it's just as bad.
From left to right: Puro, Colin, and "Dr. K".
Changed is a "game" create by Dragonsnow, a Chinese furry and known pedophile; you might recognize him from his thread here: Dragonsnow. As for the game itself, the premise is a bit... interesting; you play as a male of unidentified age named Colin, who wakes up in a dilapidated lab in an undisclosed area in an undisclosed country, with the lab being infested entirely with furries made out of what is apparently latex. With no way to fight back and no clue what in the royal hell is going on, Colin's forced to run, otherwise the furries will catch and "transfur" him... often in ways that are graphically sexual in nature, and the majority of which tend to result is the male losing his bodily autonomy, but not always his mind.
No, I'm not posting any of the "transfurs" here, gents; I'm a god-forsaken lunatic, but I don't hate myself to be looking at literal child porn for extended periods of time. I'm going to kick this off with a review of the original game and plot; the "Special Edition" of the game has all of the same general plot points, but there's been a number of changes to the plot, which I'll note.
Anyways, while traversing the labs, Colin encounters and deals with two other named individuals; Puro, a black latex wolf with the mind/mentality of a toddler that wants to be Colin's friend, and "Dr. K", a white wolf scientist who is hellbent on transforming and breaking Colin's mind for reasons he refuses to explain. Going through the mysterious lab, it gets made increasingly clear that something bad's happened to the world, with various notes all suggesting that there's been some form of calamity, but nothing is ever laid out to you unless you manage to get to the endgame. Assuming that you manage to get that far, either having the diamond-clad intestinal fortitude or are as much of a degenerate freak as the increasingly and worryingly large fanbase of this "game", you end up encountering "Dr. K", who drops the following story:
Basically, about 5-10 years before the events of the game, an unknown virus suddenly began ravaging the world, with the majority of humanity getting infected and dying. The scientists of the lab were working on a cure, which just so happened to be the latex furries; basically, the "cure" was for infected humans to get assimilated by the furries which would... somehow cure the plague, it's not specified. To "sweeten" the deal with the latex beasts, it's revealed that they're all essentially dying as well, needing a human host to properly survive. However, the scientists "conveniently" never found a way for the original minds of the humans hosts to survive, with the furry parasite getting access to all of the hosts memories and abilities instead.
Oh, and the furries all have complete immortality. Not sure how, but it means that, assuming Colin does get transformed, that means that he's going to be stuck like that for the literal rest of eternity. Keep that in mind.
Regardless, humanity still died out, with Colin and a few other humans all being placed into cryostasis to apparently wait for a cure. Colin's revealed to be infected with the virus, which never really affects him in any logical way outside of a few conveniently timed moments, and from there on, you get the choice between five different endings, all some variation of "shit":
- Betrayal: The first ending you can get; if Colin doesn't befriend Puro at a few key moments, then he'll snap at a certain point and forcefully assimilate Colin so they'll both survive. This ending is unavoidable if you don't befriend the black wolf, by the way.
If you befriend Puro, they you get access to the next one a bit later:
- Captured: During the finale, if you get captured by "Dr. K" at a specific point, then he'll kill Puro in front of Colin, then force the youth into a cage, before repeatedly drugging the youth until he turns into a wolf and ends up completely mind broken into an obedient dog in a master-slave relationship with the "doctor".
If you avoid that, and make your way to the lab entrance, "K" will stop and tell you a bit more about the virus; i.e., if Colin leaves, then he will die from it, but if he stays then the "doctor" can help him with it. Puro, not trusting "K" in the slightest, is planning on leaving regardless, even if it means killing himself. With that, you get the next two endings:
- Stay: If Colin decides to stay in the lab, then an upset Puro leaves while "K" promises to help Colin... though it's not specified how, since the only "cure" is getting mutated by furries.
- Leave: If Colin leaves, then he drops dead on a park bench outside the lab, with Puro dying off-camera shortly afterwards, with "K" lamenting that the virus was re-released on the world... despite humanity supposedly all being dead.
Should Colin decide on neither of these, you get the last, "best" ending:
- Can't Decide: "Dr. K" relents and gives Colin the option to become a white wolf like himself, but one that keeps his mind - apparently, "K" had somehow discovered a way for people to keep their minds after they get transformed, and didn't bother to mention it until now. If Colin accepts, then he'll wake up a month later transformed into a white wolf similar to "K", with Puro also being there - apparently, the black wolf found a "biorobot" in the lab that he was able to absorb, thus allowing him to live. With that, Puro and Colin leave the building.
So, that's that, right? Well, no; while the game tries to tell a story, reading between the lines makes it clear that the overarching plot is significantly worse than what the game tries to say:
For starters: while the game tries to state that "Dr. K" is telling the truth and is apparently Colin's only real hope, it gets made increasingly clear that he's most likely lying. "K"'s story about humanity getting fucked by a virus is full of holes, with there being no real explanation as to where the virus popped up from and that the supposedly-infected Colin doesn't show any sort of sickness symptoms outside of a few key moments, for starters. Not to mention, "K" is shown throughout the game to be outright psychotic, with him making a LARGE amount of misanthropic comments and plenty of the game over screens have him outright reveling in Colin's mutation and mind-rape, far more than what you'd expect at any rate. The fact that the only POV we have on basically anything is his word just makes it all look increasingly-off. The fact that none of the other scientists ever found out how to keep their minds/sanity, but "K" somehow apparently did - as well as the story often talking about how the latex monsters absorb the memories and skills of the original humans to function better - makes his stance look even more suspicious.
Not to mention, the lab is crammed full of traps and monsters all designed to mutate people into monsters; not for security, but apparently solely dedicated to Colin's rape and transformation via furries. Not to mention, there's a few documents and clues that heavily suggest that the virus was made in the lab, as a bioweapon, with the whole plot being forcing humanity into a "convert or die" situation with the furries - the fact that the scientists "conveniently" didn't find a way to preserve human minds furthers this, as well as a few documents indicating that the cryogenically-frozen humans there weren't being used for any sort of "cure" research. Lastly, the game reveals that there's an unknown third party that's watching the events of the game, who "K" is apparently working for; it's never specified who, as the game cares more about creepy fetishism rather than any coherent story.
Also, it's never explain what that "biorobot" that Puro found in the "Can't Decide" ending is; the most likely explanation is another frozen human - which indicates that Puro got desperate enough to kill a guy then lie about it to Colin - but nothing ever really confirmed. That, and there are parts of the labs we never visit, so it might genuinely just be a piece of tech that we didn't see, but... it still begs the question of what it was and why it was in the lab.
But of course, the story isn't what anyone cares about in this game; what everyone came here for is the TF fetishism, and boy oh FUCKING boy, there's a lot of it. Puts Witch Girl Adventures to shame...
Anyways, as mentioned, if any of the furries come into contact with Colin, then they immediately transform him into another animal, often in outright sexual ways. The "TFs" are made to be as "sexy" as possible, with the snow leopards outright bending the male over a table and blatantly screwing him in the ass, walls and blobs of latex that pin Colin to the wall and trap him is a similar way to those "fetish vacuum bondage bags" and leave him there unable to move - remember that the monsters are immortal, meaning that Colin is stuck there forever, by the way - and a lizard pining the youth to the ground and dry humping him over and over.
Oh, and notice that I said "youth", yeah, Colin was confirmed to be around 15at the oldest in this version of the game; while Dragonsnow tried to retcon it out by stating his age was unconfirmed and then stating that the youth aged while in cryostasis, it was confirmed that Colin's a minor in the original version. Also, "at the oldest"; there's a few implications that Colin was actually supposed to be even younger, what with the implications that the youth was aging in supposed cryostasis over a decade - indicating that the "15-year-old" was supposed to be a literal toddler, which gets backed up by a LOT of his animations being outright child/infant-like.
Oh, and did I mention that Colin spends the entire game in nothing but a pair of rather tight latex briefs, which are actually another latex monster ready to transform the youth during a certain event? Yeah.
So, that's the base game; overall, not the most fucked-up thing I've seen out of the fandom by a longshot, but still a bit graphic.
Of course, the rape train has no breaks, and the game got an updated version called the "Special Edition", which expands on both the content and the lore. For the most part, the overall story is the same - humanity got fucked by a virus, "Dr. K" is a creepy rape-obsessed wolf, the five endings are basically unchanged - but the game got a lot more content. Let's discuss the plot, as there's quite a bit to go through:
According to the story, humanity was facing a sort of energy crisis about a decade or so before the events of the plot, so they'd been drilling into the Antarctic in an effort to find resources. However, the search efforts instead released a "super-virus" that was trapped in the ice, which somehow managed to infect and kill off the majority of humanity in basically no time. Recognizing the crisis, the world's elites all sequestered themselves inside a bunker known as "The Shelter" in an undisclosed location, while commissioning the world's scientists - under the jurisdiction of the "Thunder Science Corporation" - to try and figure out a cure. Among these scientists apparently included "Dr. K", a child/toddler prodigy that was somehow significantly more intelligent than the rest of them.
- Hold on a sec, gotta go grab myself a drink for how utterly batshit this whole plot is...
- Okay, I'm back.
At an unconfirmed point, the black latex beasts suddenly showed up in the lab; according to the lore, the scientists apparently had "no idea" how they showed up, but The Shelter ordered them to experiment on them in an effort to find a cure out of desperation. Progress was slow going, due to both apparent riots from the angry and desperate civilians that had no idea what in the hell was even going on - apparently there was a near-total media blackout on the plague - and because the majority of scientists didn't really bother actually "studying" anything and spent more time playing with the latex monsters (not joking). Nonetheless, some progress got made; the scientists were able to create a new kind of latex: the "light" monsters, which are significantly more colorful overall.
The documents revealing this go into the lore surrounding both; the black latex monsters - which include Puro - are the original eldritch monsters, having either crystalline cores or masks - often both - that they required to live. Destroying or damaging these would kill the monster; outside of that, they were functionally immortal, merely having to enter a regeneration cycle after a period that would essentially allow the monster to be "reborn", at the cost of likely losing all of their memories of the current body.
Meanwhile, the light monsters were apparently just immortal; they didn't require cores or regeneration, nor do they require hosts or any form of sustenance. The lack of a skeleton does mean they can get washed away easily, but other than that they're borderline unstoppable. Both types of monsters are vulnerable to electric shocks, however. And apparently nukes, which comes up later.
Oh, and if anyone else did notice about the dark "Pureblood" and light "Artificial" latex monsters, then congrats! You also noticed that the plot is basically just a rip-off of Kingdom Hearts! Yes, the scientists made the fucking Heartless, except significantly more sex-obsessed.
God, kill me now...
Basically, the scientists' plan was to use these things to assimilate infected humans and "cure" the plague; apparently, testing revealed that the plague only targeted the "human genome", and that turning someone into an animal would magically destroy the virus. Much like the original game, it got confirmed that, initially, the assimilated human would suffer a death of their personality, with the latex monster instead getting their memories and skillsets. However, it also got confirmed that one group of scientists found a way for humans to bond at will to the monsters, allowing both groups to keep their minds and even reverse the transformation if wanted/needed.
However, at an unconfirmed point, some kind of freak "accident" occurred that resulted in an unlucky human and three latex monsters all getting forcibly fused together and becoming a single "sergal" monster known as "Tail", which for some reason didn't maintain the original personalities of the prior four, but did have the prior knowledge and skillsets, being a completely unstoppable monster that was hellbent on converting everyone.
Nonetheless, the company was still able to safely secure the monster inside the facility; it's also not confirmed what happened to the research team or their progress on a cure, but it all apparently/conveniently disappeared.
From there on, the timeline gets a bit fuzzy; some more research revealed that the latex monsters are apparently an interdimensional race connected via a hive mind, and that the apparent progenitor of the race is a bat/wolf/werepyre-like thing called the "Core Queen". The lore also confirms that the virus that's killing humanity - called the "Pale Virus", for the curious - is apparently connected/being controlled by the damn thing, and The Shelter ordered the company to find a way to communicate with the monster to call a ceasefire; if not that, then find a way to kill her ass. Needless to say, both angles failed.
At an unconfirmed point after that, there was an encounter with another horror, a partially crystalline deer known as the Wendigo, which shed a bit more light on the latex hive mind; apparently, it views humanity as a "plague" somehow, viewing individuality as horrifying in its eldritch mindset, and that the monsters were seeking to rectify that via the plague and latex, basically forcing humanity to convert or die. It also revealed that the monsters - or at least the stronger ones - have outright supernatural abilities such as the ability to create interdimensional portals at will. Because... I don't even know at this point.
The Wendigo, again from TV Tropes. Question: why does it have tits?
After all that, one unknown day, the rioters apparently managed to breach the facility and go on a rampage; according to "Dr. K", it happened at the "literal worst possible time", as the scientists were supposedly on the verge of a "massive breakthrough" of the whole situation. The riot somehow allowed the aforementioned "Tail" sergal to break free and murder everyone in the facility, guard, scientist, and rioter alike; the guards couldn't stop either "Tail" or the rioters, since they were all only equipped with specialized stun guns designed to non-lethally force the monsters back, and those guns were already all low on ammo.
Oh, and fun fact: you get to play as "Tail" during this sequence. It's unskippable too, so you're basically forced to fuck over humanity to progress.
Naturally, the one scientist that apparently escaped all this completely unscathed was "Dr. K", who also just so happened to have found out how to maintain his mind after transforming, apparently separate from the prior team's efforts. Apparently, "K" was planning on sharing his research with everyone else, but the rioters broke in just before he could. So, that's a thing.
Anyways, the subsequent rampage allowed both the plague and the latex monsters to rampage completely unchecked; not only did the virus manage to wipe out the rest of humanity aside from The Shelter, "Dr. K", and possibly some other survivors, but the latex monsters were also given free reign over the rest of the world... at least temporarily. Turns out, The Shelter actually nuked "Tail" and a pretty good chunk of the monsters, which was confirmed to have straight-up killed them - there's likely some stragglers, but it confirms that humanity is able to fight back. After that little show of force, the leaders of The Shelter promptly called "Dr. K" and made it clear that, if the plague were to get restarted from his research failing - apparently the virus actually got stopped at this point - then they would nuke him and his lab into oblivion.
In case you guys didn't realize; yes, "The Shelter" is supposed to be the real villains of the plot. Why? Because the narrative makes it clear that they will kill Colin - who's functionally dead regardless - or "Dr. K" and all of the latex monsters if they pose a threat to humanity, and that makes them the bad guys according to furries.
Or, at least, that's the story we're all told; much like the prior game, there's some implications that the actual plot is different.
For starters, while a lot of the prior implications that the lab made the virus and unleashed it were removed, it's still very fucking obvious that they were into some fucked up shit prior. As mentioned, it's confirmed that they weren't spending the most time research on how to stop the plague; the lore makes it clear that they were goofing around and developing light latex monsters more than actually trying to solve issues. The fact that the prior research that confirmed that the scientists were able to safely combine human and monster all vanished is weirdly convenient for the doomer narrative as well; leaves only "Dr. K"'s supposed cure as the only option. Also, it gets revealed that the monsters were primarily learning through "mimicry", and that all of the various behaviors that they were showing in-game were apparently either learned from the scientists or possibly other sources.
Bear in mind just how... sexual, many of the transformations are. Also, you can find an awful lot of stuff that looks like BDSM gear and fetish objects in the lab, including a bunch of monsters in those vacuum-sealed BDSM bags at one point.
Meanwhile, there's the subject of "Dr. K". While the documents in-game try to portray him as an overworked individual trying to fix everything, a lot of the implications that he was a sick freak from the original game are left intact, and they even got added on! For starters, the game repeatedly confirms that there are ways for humans to keep their minds... but "K" repeatedly avoids acknowledging them, outright dodging the question until the finale; and even then, Puro has to beat him unconscious prior unlike the original game. It also raises the implication even harder that "Dr. K" might not even be a doctor; for starters, it's confirmed that "K" was only a child during the apocalypse, which is still suspicious even with the "child prodigy" excuse. It also implies that "K" might actually be a latex monster skinwalking as a scientist; the story hammers in a lot harder how the monsters absorb memories from humans, and "K" is notably more focused on transforming humans than anything else.
One last bit; while the game does try to avoid the "unreliable narrator" bit that the original game slipped into, it still falls a bit short. Every lore document that you find ALWAYS ends up agreeing with "K" and his viewpoints, which are often outright misanthropic at best, regardless if it's from a desperate rioter, a bored security guard, or a scientist that should've pulled his head out of his ass and got back to work. Awfully convenient for a guy who wants to control the narrative and convince Colin to submit in body and mind...
But, all that is just speculation...
From there on, that's where the game begins, and it's basically the same overall plot; Colin wakes up, gets chased by monsters, gets the choice of endings, etc. Though, there is the added caveat that "Dr. K" is implied to get nuked in the "Leave" ending. So, that's something.
So, that's the main overall plot; let's get into the transformations - which actually have some plot bits that I need to talk about. Joy.
For starters, the changes to the lore actually affected the majority of transformations that Colin gets forced into. Aside from a few that were ported directly from the first game with no changes - because the lore wasn't really developed then - there's actually a pretty noticeable difference between "light" and "dark" transformations, which I'll go into for the sake of the review.
For starters: as mentioned previously, there's a few differences between the light and dark latex monsters, and it goes further beyond biology. The dark latex monsters are noted to be a lot more "eldritch/monstrous" overall, being directly connected to an alien hive mind that wants to transform humanity. That said, they're also paradoxically more friendly to humanity and have better intentions that the light latex; the horrors are implied to be more afraid of humanity than hostile, and most of the dark latex monsters seen are friendlier overall. This reflects the transformations; most of them tend to be relatively quick affairs, while some of the more "higher-tier" monsters have a greater focus on body horror than sex. The worst is Colin getting infected by a crystal, which results in three different monsters all bursting out of his back while his human body lifelessly crumbles to the ground like a suit. Even then, though, the game/narration makes it very clear that Colin's mind and sanity are intact in most of these, with the aforementioned "three-body" one having his mind split into a three-way hive mind - he still very explicitly has complete control of himself.
By contrast, the light latex monsters are all fucked up, pretty much without an exception. The aforementioned sex objects and shit are all associated with the lights, and the vast majority of sexual content in the game involves a light monster in some way; the narrative even gleefully describes how Colin's getting penetrated in some of them. The light latex monsters themselves are all basically thrill killers and have deliberately fetishized designs; the transformations reflect this, with the majority of them involving the monsters raping or mentally dominating Colin. For instance, the "Queen Gargoyle" monster turns Colin to stone and sits on his head, leaving him fully conscious forever while being completely unable to move his own body. Meanwhile, the "Silkworm/Bugtaur" monster straight-up turns Colin into a breeding slave and has that "fetal pornography" bit from Dragonsnow's page going on. There's also a couple of mutations that have Colin changing into female monsters, typically for the sake of having sex with Puro; bear in mind that Puro is also indicated to be rather young. Furthermore, while several light transformations try to imply that Colin keeps his sanity, it becomes clear that its more that his personality was being re-written, rather then erased; sort of an attempt at a "fetish loophole" for people that might complain that Colin always loses his mind - after all, "it's not gone, it's just being remade into something else!"
It also gets made very clear that, while the darks only absorb a single host, lights will actively try to kill as many humans as possible and turn them into more latex, as revealed by several photographs and documents.
Fun fact, most of the light latex monsters are based on different fursonas of the staff - "Dr. K" and "Tail" are both based on Dragonsnow's characters, for instance. Also, "Dr. K" always tries to turn you into a light monster, never a dark one.
So, I'd say that really all I got on the transformations this go-around.
So, with all that being said; why's this game so infamous? I mean, it's a fetish game, and not the first fetish game that the fandom's made; why's it so bad?
Well, for starters, it's incredibly popular with the fandom overall; while the other furry fetish games were a bit more niche, Changed is significantly more widespread, likely because it's both available on Steam, and is much more blatant with the more disgusting parts of its fetish stuff than the other Steam game, Tribal Hunter, is. As mentioned here on the site, the fandom's been getting increasingly depraved over time, and the game does a pretty good job of showcasing all that, what with the amount of child rape in this one. "Hard candy" is becoming increasingly popular and widespread in the fandom overall, and Changed delivers it in spades; even with the barest of censorship, it's still blatant that it's a game about watching a kid get raped by animals, which is what furries crave. It doesn't have a "heroic" narrative like Tribal Hunter, nor is it as difficult to get to the sex shit as Flexible Survival, or as costly and artless as Hc Svnt Dracones; it's just pure porn.
The other part of the game's infamy is because its frequently pushed on minors. The censorship is just enough to where it can skirt under most casual glances, and it's widely available on Steam as a result. There's also a bunch of fangames made for it, mostly on Roblox; furries on that platform love to push the games onto the younger audiences, not helped by rather lax moderation standards, and its prime grooming material. There're not really any excuses for it, either; furries will happily brag about how they're using it to get more minors in the fandom, since it encourages and normalizes this type of freakshit, and anyone that says otherwise is obviously the bad guy.
So, that's Changed for you guys; did I miss anything? Probably did, admittedly, so if anyone wants to point out anything, let me know! Also, feel free to check out both Dragonsnow's thread mentioned above, as well as the Reddit thread on Changed, r/changedfurry; they both have some more info on this thing, if anyone's curious.
Also, as mentioned above, there's a couple of other furry games that I know of - Tribal Hunter and Flexible Survival - that I could do reviews of, if anyone's interested. Former's also on Steam, while the latter is a furry MUCK from about a decade ago, if I remember correctly. If anyone wants a review, just let me know!
EDIT: Added in some details that I missed earlier.
Also, as mentioned above, there's a couple of other furry games that I know of - Tribal Hunter and Flexible Survival - that I could do reviews of, if anyone's interested. Former's also on Steam, while the latter is a furry MUCK from about a decade ago, if I remember correctly. If anyone wants a review, just let me know!
On one hand, there's been events in-game that blatantly favor woke politics, the most notable being a full-blown pro-Democrat event during the 2024 election period with in-game Kamala Harris encouraging people - bear in mind that one of the primary audiences for this game is children - to vote Democrat,
Oh I 'member that one making the rounds, that wasn't actually promoted by Epic, but rather a really laughable marketing stunt from Kamala's campaign team that had no usable weapons (lol) and only had less than a thousand people actually playing it despite all the news articles by jurnoscum when it was new but was widely mocked with many of the trailers of the custom map online and is completely buried by literally everything else now.
Oh I 'member that one making the rounds, that wasn't actually promoted by Epic, but rather a really laughable marketing stunt from Kamala's campaign team that had no usable weapons (lol) and only had less than a thousand people actually playing it despite all the news articles by jurnoscum when it was new but was widely mocked with many of the trailers of the custom map online and is completely buried by literally everything else now.
Holy shit that's a deep dive. The game not having an age restriction is pretty horrific by itself. And it's clear to be standard rape game, with the protagonist being male pretty much the only reason why it didn't start a controversy. It also sounds like a deep dive into hardcore furry misanthropic worldview - Humans are evil for existing, and raping minors is actually good.
Oh I 'member that one making the rounds, that wasn't actually promoted by Epic, but rather a really laughable marketing stunt from Kamala's campaign team that had no usable weapons (lol) and only had less than a thousand people actually playing it despite all the news articles by jurnoscum when it was new but was widely mocked with many of the trailers of the custom map online and is completely buried by literally everything else now.
Holy shit that's a deep dive. The game not having an age restriction is pretty horrific by itself. And it's clear to be standard rape game, with the protagonist being male pretty much the only reason why it didn't start a controversy. It also sounds like a deep dive into hardcore furry misanthropic worldview - Humans are evil for existing, and raping minors is actually good.
Pretty standard furry fare, really; nothing that it's in Changed is all that new or uncommon to furry settings in general. In fact, Changed is actually pretty tame as far as porn content goes, in comparison to typical furry standards, which makes some form of sense; had to tone the content down to get some usable grooming material, after all. Just shoving hardcore porn into kids' faces won't do it, they have to lure them in and manipulate them over time. And yes, the game is notoriously popular as grooming material; the aforementioned Dragonsnow and his followers are well-known "Hard Candy" consumers, and the Reddit and Discord are both known for supporting this crap. Particularly Reddit.
The game is still getting updates, by the way; there's likely to be more content about this game in the future, so I might go ahead and post some more crap on this one once it gets released, if there's anything substantial.
Aside from this one, the other two furry games I mentioned are still on the table if anyone wants me to review them both. Tribal Hunter is a furry fatfur/inflation fetish-themed game on Steam that's actually not nearly as fucked up as it otherwise could've been - it's actually borderline wholesome in comparison. Flexible Survival is a furry MUCK with similar overarching themes of transformation and misanthropy to Changed, though there's admittedly less amounts of child rape. I can write reviews for both games, if anyone's curious.
Changed: Heavy, and probably one of the worst on the internet.
So, bit different from the usual games focusing on troonery and anti-white crap, but I wanted to bring this one to light, as it's just as bad.
From left to right: Puro, Colin, and "Dr. K".
Changed is a "game" create by Dragonsnow, a Chinese furry and known pedophile; you might recognize him from his thread here: Dragonsnow. As for the game itself, the premise is a bit... interesting; you play as a male of unidentified age named Colin, who wakes up in a dilapidated lab in an undisclosed area in an undisclosed country, with the lab being infested entirely with furries made out of what is apparently latex. With no way to fight back and no clue what in the royal hell is going on, Colin's forced to run, otherwise the furries will catch and "transfur" him... often in ways that are graphically sexual in nature, and the majority of which tend to result is the male losing his bodily autonomy, but not always his mind.
No, I'm not posting any of the "transfurs" here, gents; I'm a god-forsaken lunatic, but I don't hate myself to be looking at literal child porn for extended periods of time. I'm going to kick this off with a review of the original game and plot; the "Special Edition" of the game has all of the same general plot points, but there's been a number of changes to the plot, which I'll note.
Anyways, while traversing the labs, Colin encounters and deals with two other named individuals; Puro, a black latex wolf with the mind/mentality of a toddler that wants to be Colin's friend, and "Dr. K", a white wolf scientist who is hellbent on transforming and breaking Colin's mind for reasons he refuses to explain. Going through the mysterious lab, it gets made increasingly clear that something bad's happened to the world, with various notes all suggesting that there's been some form of calamity, but nothing is ever laid out to you unless you manage to get to the endgame. Assuming that you manage to get that far, either having the diamond-clad intestinal fortitude or are as much of a degenerate freak as the increasingly and worryingly large fanbase of this "game", you end up encountering "Dr. K", who drops the following story:
Basically, about 5-10 years before the events of the game, an unknown virus suddenly began ravaging the world, with the majority of humanity getting infected and dying. The scientists of the lab were working on a cure, which just so happened to be the latex furries; basically, the "cure" was for infected humans to get assimilated by the furries which would... somehow cure the plague, it's not specified. To "sweeten" the deal with the latex beasts, it's revealed that they're all essentially dying as well, needing a human host to properly survive. However, the scientists "conveniently" never found a way for the original minds of the humans hosts to survive, with the furry parasite getting access to all of the hosts memories and abilities instead.
Oh, and the furries all have complete immortality. Not sure how, but it means that, assuming Colin does get transformed, that means that he's going to be stuck like that for the literal rest of eternity. Keep that in mind.
Regardless, humanity still died out, with Colin and a few other humans all being placed into cryostasis to apparently wait for a cure. Colin's revealed to be infected with the virus, which never really affects him in any logical way outside of a few conveniently timed moments, and from there on, you get the choice between five different endings, all some variation of "shit":
Spoiler: There's so much shit... - Betrayal: The first ending you can get; if Colin doesn't befriend Puro at a few key moments, then he'll snap at a certain point and forcefully assimilate Colin so they'll both survive. This ending is unavoidable if you don't befriend the black wolf, by the way.
If you befriend Puro, they you get access to the next one a bit later:
- Captured: During the finale, if you get captured by "Dr. K" at a specific point, then he'll kill Puro in front of Colin, then force the youth into a cage, before repeatedly drugging the youth until he turns into a wolf and ends up completely mind broken into an obedient dog in a master-slave relationship with the "doctor".
If you avoid that, and make your way to the lab entrance, "K" will stop and tell you a bit more about the virus; i.e., if Colin leaves, then he will die from it, but if he stays then the "doctor" can help him with it. Puro, not trusting "K" in the slightest, is planning on leaving regardless, even if it means killing himself. With that, you get the next two endings:
- Stay: If Colin decides to stay in the lab, then an upset Puro leaves while "K" promises to help Colin... though it's not specified how, since the only "cure" is getting mutated by furries.
- Leave: If Colin leaves, then he drops dead on a park bench outside the lab, with Puro dying off-camera shortly afterwards, with "K" lamenting that the virus was re-released on the world... despite humanity supposedly all being dead.
Should Colin decide on neither of these, you get the last, "best" ending:
- Can't Decide: "Dr. K" relents and gives Colin the option to become a white wolf like himself, but one that keeps his mind - apparently, "K" had somehow discovered a way for people to keep their minds after they get transformed, and didn't bother to mention it until now. If Colin accepts, then he'll wake up a month later transformed into a white wolf similar to "K", with Puro also being there - apparently, the black wolf found a "biorobot" in the lab that he was able to absorb, thus allowing him to live. With that, Puro and Colin leave the building.
So, that's that, right? Well, no; while the game tries to tell a story, reading between the lines makes it clear that the overarching plot is significantly worse than what the game tries to say:
Spoiler: A wee bit of autism For starters: while the game tries to state that "Dr. K" is telling the truth and is apparently Colin's only real hope, it gets made increasingly clear that he's most likely lying. "K"'s story about humanity getting fucked by a virus is full of holes, with there being no real explanation as to where the virus popped up from and that the supposedly-infected Colin doesn't show any sort of sickness symptoms outside of a few key moments, for starters. Not to mention, "K" is shown throughout the game to be outright psychotic, with him making a LARGE amount of misanthropic comments and plenty of the game over screens have him outright reveling in Colin's mutation and mind-rape, far more than what you'd expect at any rate. The fact that the only POV we have on basically anything is his word just makes it all look increasingly-off. The fact that none of the other scientists ever found out how to keep their minds/sanity, but "K" somehow apparently did - as well as the story often talking about how the latex monsters absorb the memories and skills of the original humans to function better - makes his stance look even more suspicious.
Not to mention, the lab is crammed full of traps and monsters all designed to mutate people into monsters; not for security, but apparently solely dedicated to Colin's rape and transformation via furries. Not to mention, there's a few documents and clues that heavily suggest that the virus was made in the lab, as a bioweapon, with the whole plot being forcing humanity into a "convert or die" situation with the furries - the fact that the scientists "conveniently" didn't find a way to preserve human minds furthers this, as well as a few documents indicating that the cryogenically-frozen humans there weren't being used for any sort of "cure" research. Lastly, the game reveals that there's an unknown third party that's watching the events of the game, who "K" is apparently working for; it's never specified who, as the game cares more about creepy fetishism rather than any coherent story.
Also, it's never explain what that "biorobot" that Puro found in the "Can't Decide" ending is; the most likely explanation is another frozen human - which indicates that Puro got desperate enough to kill a guy then lie about it to Colin - but nothing ever really confirmed. That, and there are parts of the labs we never visit, so it might genuinely just be a piece of tech that we didn't see, but... it still begs the question of what it was and why it was in the lab.
But of course, the story isn't what anyone cares about in this game; what everyone came here for is the TF fetishism, and boy oh FUCKING boy, there's a lot of it. Puts Witch Girl Adventures to shame...
Spoiler: More shit Anyways, as mentioned, if any of the furries come into contact with Colin, then they immediately transform him into another animal, often in outright sexual ways. The "TFs" are made to be as "sexy" as possible, with the snow leopards outright bending the male over a table and blatantly screwing him in the ass, walls and blobs of latex that pin Colin to the wall and trap him is a similar way to those "fetish vacuum bondage bags" and leave him there unable to move - remember that the monsters are immortal, meaning that Colin is stuck there forever, by the way - and a lizard pining the youth to the ground and dry humping him over and over.
Oh, and notice that I said "youth", yeah, Colin was confirmed to be around 15at the oldest in this version of the game; while Dragonsnow tried to retcon it out by stating his age was unconfirmed and then stating that the youth aged while in cryostasis, it was confirmed that Colin's a minor in the original version. Also, "at the oldest"; there's a few implications that Colin was actually supposed to be even younger, what with the implications that the youth was aging in supposed cryostasis over a decade - indicating that the "15-year-old" was supposed to be a literal toddler, which gets backed up by a LOT of his animations being outright child/infant-like.
Oh, and did I mention that Colin spends the entire game in nothing but a pair of rather tight latex briefs, which are actually another latex monster ready to transform the youth during a certain event? Yeah.
So, that's the base game; overall, not the most fucked-up thing I've seen out of the fandom by a longshot, but still a bit graphic.
Of course, the rape train has no breaks, and the game got an updated version called the "Special Edition", which expands on both the content and the lore. For the most part, the overall story is the same - humanity got fucked by a virus, "Dr. K" is a creepy rape-obsessed wolf, the five endings are basically unchanged - but the game got a lot more content. Let's discuss the plot, as there's quite a bit to go through:
According to the story, humanity was facing a sort of energy crisis about a decade or so before the events of the plot, so they'd been drilling into the Antarctic in an effort to find resources. However, the search efforts instead released a "super-virus" that was trapped in the ice, which somehow managed to infect and kill off the majority of humanity in basically no time. Recognizing the crisis, the world's elites all sequestered themselves inside a bunker known as "The Shelter" in an undisclosed location, while commissioning the world's scientists - under the jurisdiction of the "Thunder Science Corporation" - to try and figure out a cure. Among these scientists apparently included "Dr. K", a child/toddler prodigy that was somehow significantly more intelligent than the rest of them.
- Hold on a sec, gotta go grab myself a drink for how utterly batshit this whole plot is...
- Okay, I'm back.
At an unconfirmed point, the black latex beasts suddenly showed up in the lab; according to the lore, the scientists apparently had "no idea" how they showed up, but The Shelter ordered them to experiment on them in an effort to find a cure out of desperation. Progress was slow going, due to both apparent riots from the angry and desperate civilians that had no idea what in the hell was even going on - apparently there was a near-total media blackout on the plague - and because the majority of scientists didn't really bother actually "studying" anything and spent more time playing with the latex monsters (not joking). Nonetheless, some progress got made; the scientists were able to create a new kind of latex: the "light" monsters, which are significantly more colorful overall.
The documents revealing this go into the lore surrounding both; the black latex monsters - which include Puro - are the original eldritch monsters, having either crystalline cores or masks - often both - that they required to live. Destroying or damaging these would kill the monster; outside of that, they were functionally immortal, merely having to enter a regeneration cycle after a period that would essentially allow the monster to be "reborn", at the cost of likely losing all of their memories of the current body.
Meanwhile, the light monsters were apparently just immortal; they didn't require cores or regeneration, nor do they require hosts or any form of sustenance. The lack of a skeleton does mean they can get washed away easily, but other than that they're borderline unstoppable. Both types of monsters are vulnerable to electric shocks, however. And apparently nukes, which comes up later.
Oh, and if anyone else did notice about the dark "Pureblood" and light "Artificial" latex monsters, then congrats! You also noticed that the plot is basically just a rip-off of Kingdom Hearts! Yes, the scientists made the fucking Heartless, except significantly more sex-obsessed.
God, kill me now...
Basically, the scientists' plan was to use these things to assimilate infected humans and "cure" the plague; apparently, testing revealed that the plague only targeted the "human genome", and that turning someone into an animal would magically destroy the virus. Much like the original game, it got confirmed that, initially, the assimilated human would suffer a death of their personality, with the latex monster instead getting their memories and skillsets. However, it also got confirmed that one group of scientists found a way for humans to bond at will to the monsters, allowing both groups to keep their minds and even reverse the transformation if wanted/needed.
However, at an unconfirmed point, some kind of freak "accident" occurred that resulted in an unlucky human and three latex monsters all getting forcibly fused together and becoming a single "sergal" monster known as "Tail", which for some reason didn't maintain the original personalities of the prior four, but did have the prior knowledge and skillsets, being a completely unstoppable monster that was hellbent on converting everyone.
Spoiler: "Tail"
"Tail", ladies and gents. Courtesy of TV Tropes.
Nonetheless, the company was still able to safely secure the monster inside the facility; it's also not confirmed what happened to the research team or their progress on a cure, but it all apparently/conveniently disappeared.
From there on, the timeline gets a bit fuzzy; some more research revealed that the latex monsters are apparently an interdimensional race connected via a hive mind, and that the apparent progenitor of the race is a bat/wolf/werepyre-like thing called the "Core Queen". The lore also confirms that the virus that's killing humanity - called the "Pale Virus", for the curious - is apparently connected/being controlled by the damn thing, and The Shelter ordered the company to find a way to communicate with the monster to call a ceasefire; if not that, then find a way to kill her ass. Needless to say, both angles failed.
Spoiler: Core Queen
Core Queen, courtesy of TV Tropes.
At an unconfirmed point after that, there was an encounter with another horror, a partially crystalline deer known as the Wendigo, which shed a bit more light on the latex hive mind; apparently, it views humanity as a "plague" somehow, viewing individuality as horrifying in its eldritch mindset, and that the monsters were seeking to rectify that via the plague and latex, basically forcing humanity to convert or die. It also revealed that the monsters - or at least the stronger ones - have outright supernatural abilities such as the ability to create interdimensional portals at will. Because... I don't even know at this point.
Spoiler: The Wendigo
The Wendigo, again from TV Tropes. Question: why does it have tits?
After all that, one unknown day, the rioters apparently managed to breach the facility and go on a rampage; according to "Dr. K", it happened at the "literal worst possible time", as the scientists were supposedly on the verge of a "massive breakthrough" of the whole situation. The riot somehow allowed the aforementioned "Tail" sergal to break free and murder everyone in the facility, guard, scientist, and rioter alike; the guards couldn't stop either "Tail" or the rioters, since they were all only equipped with specialized stun guns designed to non-lethally force the monsters back, and those guns were already all low on ammo.
Oh, and fun fact: you get to play as "Tail" during this sequence. It's unskippable too, so you're basically forced to fuck over humanity to progress.
Naturally, the one scientist that apparently escaped all this completely unscathed was "Dr. K", who also just so happened to have found out how to maintain his mind after transforming, apparently separate from the prior team's efforts. Apparently, "K" was planning on sharing his research with everyone else, but the rioters broke in just before he could. So, that's a thing.
Anyways, the subsequent rampage allowed both the plague and the latex monsters to rampage completely unchecked; not only did the virus manage to wipe out the rest of humanity aside from The Shelter, "Dr. K", and possibly some other survivors, but the latex monsters were also given free reign over the rest of the world... at least temporarily. Turns out, The Shelter actually nuked "Tail" and a pretty good chunk of the monsters, which was confirmed to have straight-up killed them - there's likely some stragglers, but it confirms that humanity is able to fight back. After that little show of force, the leaders of The Shelter promptly called "Dr. K" and made it clear that, if the plague were to get restarted from his research failing - apparently the virus actually got stopped at this point - then they would nuke him and his lab into oblivion.
In case you guys didn't realize; yes, "The Shelter" is supposed to be the real villains of the plot. Why? Because the narrative makes it clear that they will kill Colin - who's functionally dead regardless - or "Dr. K" and all of the latex monsters if they pose a threat to humanity, and that makes them the bad guys according to furries.
Or, at least, that's the story we're all told; much like the prior game, there's some implications that the actual plot is different.
For starters, while a lot of the prior implications that the lab made the virus and unleashed it were removed, it's still very fucking obvious that they were into some fucked up shit prior. As mentioned, it's confirmed that they weren't spending the most time research on how to stop the plague; the lore makes it clear that they were goofing around and developing light latex monsters more than actually trying to solve issues. The fact that the prior research that confirmed that the scientists were able to safely combine human and monster all vanished is weirdly convenient for the doomer narrative as well; leaves only "Dr. K"'s supposed cure as the only option. Also, it gets revealed that the monsters were primarily learning through "mimicry", and that all of the various behaviors that they were showing in-game were apparently either learned from the scientists or possibly other sources.
Bear in mind just how... sexual, many of the transformations are. Also, you can find an awful lot of stuff that looks like BDSM gear and fetish objects in the lab, including a bunch of monsters in those vacuum-sealed BDSM bags at one point.
Image courtesy of @ItsLessThanNothing over on the Dragonsnow thread. Give the man a drink, he deserves a few!
Meanwhile, there's the subject of "Dr. K". While the documents in-game try to portray him as an overworked individual trying to fix everything, a lot of the implications that he was a sick freak from the original game are left intact, and they even got added on! For starters, the game repeatedly confirms that there are ways for humans to keep their minds... but "K" repeatedly avoids acknowledging them, outright dodging the question until the finale; and even then, Puro has to beat him unconscious prior unlike the original game. It also raises the implication even harder that "Dr. K" might not even be a doctor; for starters, it's confirmed that "K" was only a child during the apocalypse, which is still suspicious even with the "child prodigy" excuse. It also implies that "K" might actually be a latex monster skinwalking as a scientist; the story hammers in a lot harder how the monsters absorb memories from humans, and "K" is notably more focused on transforming humans than anything else.
One last bit; while the game does try to avoid the "unreliable narrator" bit that the original game slipped into, it still falls a bit short. Every lore document that you find ALWAYS ends up agreeing with "K" and his viewpoints, which are often outright misanthropic at best, regardless if it's from a desperate rioter, a bored security guard, or a scientist that should've pulled his head out of his ass and got back to work. Awfully convenient for a guy who wants to control the narrative and convince Colin to submit in body and mind...
But, all that is just speculation...
From there on, that's where the game begins, and it's basically the same overall plot; Colin wakes up, gets chased by monsters, gets the choice of endings, etc. Though, there is the added caveat that "Dr. K" is implied to get nuked in the "Leave" ending. So, that's something.
So, that's the main overall plot; let's get into the transformations - which actually have some plot bits that I need to talk about. Joy.
For starters, the changes to the lore actually affected the majority of transformations that Colin gets forced into. Aside from a few that were ported directly from the first game with no changes - because the lore wasn't really developed then - there's actually a pretty noticeable difference between "light" and "dark" transformations, which I'll go into for the sake of the review.
For starters: as mentioned previously, there's a few differences between the light and dark latex monsters, and it goes further beyond biology. The dark latex monsters are noted to be a lot more "eldritch/monstrous" overall, being directly connected to an alien hive mind that wants to transform humanity. That said, they're also paradoxically more friendly to humanity and have better intentions that the light latex; the horrors are implied to be more afraid of humanity than hostile, and most of the dark latex monsters seen are friendlier overall. This reflects the transformations; most of them tend to be relatively quick affairs, while some of the more "higher-tier" monsters have a greater focus on body horror than sex. The worst is Colin getting infected by a crystal, which results in three different monsters all bursting out of his back while his human body lifelessly crumbles to the ground like a suit. Even then, though, the game/narration makes it very clear that Colin's mind and sanity are intact in most of these, with the aforementioned "three-body" one having his mind split into a three-way hive mind - he still very explicitly has complete control of himself.
By contrast, the light latex monsters are all fucked up, pretty much without an exception. The aforementioned sex objects and shit are all associated with the lights, and the vast majority of sexual content in the game involves a light monster in some way; the narrative even gleefully describes how Colin's getting penetrated in some of them. The light latex monsters themselves are all basically thrill killers and have deliberately fetishized designs; the transformations reflect this, with the majority of them involving the monsters raping or mentally dominating Colin. For instance, the "Queen Gargoyle" monster turns Colin to stone and sits on his head, leaving him fully conscious forever while being completely unable to move his own body. Meanwhile, the "Silkworm/Bugtaur" monster straight-up turns Colin into a breeding slave and has that "fetal pornography" bit from Dragonsnow's page going on. There's also a couple of mutations that have Colin changing into female monsters, typically for the sake of having sex with Puro; bear in mind that Puro is also indicated to be rather young. Furthermore, while several light transformations try to imply that Colin keeps his sanity, it becomes clear that its more that his personality was being re-written, rather then erased; sort of an attempt at a "fetish loophole" for people that might complain that Colin always loses his mind - after all, "it's not gone, it's just being remade into something else!"
It also gets made very clear that, while the darks only absorb a single host, lights will actively try to kill as many humans as possible and turn them into more latex, as revealed by several photographs and documents.
Fun fact, most of the light latex monsters are based on different fursonas of the staff - "Dr. K" and "Tail" are both based on Dragonsnow's characters, for instance. Also, "Dr. K" always tries to turn you into a light monster, never a dark one.
So, I'd say that really all I got on the transformations this go-around.
So, with all that being said; why's this game so infamous? I mean, it's a fetish game, and not the first fetish game that the fandom's made; why's it so bad?
Well, for starters, it's incredibly popular with the fandom overall; while the other furry fetish games were a bit more niche, Changed is significantly more widespread, likely because it's both available on Steam, and is much more blatant with the more disgusting parts of its fetish stuff than the other Steam game, Tribal Hunter, is. As mentioned here on the site, the fandom's been getting increasingly depraved over time, and the game does a pretty good job of showcasing all that, what with the amount of child rape in this one. "Hard candy" is becoming increasingly popular and widespread in the fandom overall, and Changed delivers it in spades; even with the barest of censorship, it's still blatant that it's a game about watching a kid get raped by animals, which is what furries crave. It doesn't have a "heroic" narrative like Tribal Hunter, nor is it as difficult to get to the sex shit as Flexible Survival, or as costly and artless as Hc Svnt Dracones; it's just pure porn.
The other part of the game's infamy is because its frequently pushed on minors. The censorship is just enough to where it can skirt under most casual glances, and it's widely available on Steam as a result. There's also a bunch of fangames made for it, mostly on Roblox; furries on that platform love to push the games onto the younger audiences, not helped by rather lax moderation standards, and its prime grooming material. There're not really any excuses for it, either; furries will happily brag about how they're using it to get more minors in the fandom, since it encourages and normalizes this type of freakshit, and anyone that says otherwise is obviously the bad guy.
So, that's Changed for you guys; did I miss anything? Probably did, admittedly, so if anyone wants to point out anything, let me know! Also, feel free to check out both Dragonsnow's thread mentioned above, as well as the Reddit thread on Changed, r/changedfurry; they both have some more info on this thing, if anyone's curious.
Also, as mentioned above, there's a couple of other furry games that I know of - Tribal Hunter and Flexible Survival - that I could do reviews of, if anyone's interested. Former's also on Steam, while the latter is a furry MUCK from about a decade ago, if I remember correctly. If anyone wants a review, just let me know!