Visual Novels

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Do you play visual Novels?

  • No, because that’s fucking gay

    Votes: 83 15.7%
  • Yes, because I read them for the plot

    Votes: 195 36.9%
  • No, because they’re not really video games

    Votes: 34 6.4%
  • Yes, because anime girls are better than real women

    Votes: 116 21.9%
  • No, but I think about playing them

    Votes: 68 12.9%
  • Yes, but I do it ironically

    Votes: 33 6.2%

  • Total voters
    529
Sharin No Kuni was made by the same people. Are you familiar with it? There are some similarities to it, funny enough. The main character's disposition being one of them.
I’ve heard of it but not got round to playing it yet! It’s on my list though.

While I think about it, has anyone here played Natsu No Kusari? I wanna try a ClockUp game that isn’t Maggot Baits or Euphoria, and this one seems dark but relatively tame compared to other ClockUp works.
 
I’ve heard of it but not got round to playing it yet! It’s on my list though.

While I think about it, has anyone here played Natsu No Kusari? I wanna try a ClockUp game that isn’t Maggot Baits or Euphoria, and this one seems dark but relatively tame compared to other ClockUp works.
> Google the game.
> Story is about locking a girl in a rape dungeon.
I mean it's not gorn at least.
 
> Google the game.
> Story is about locking a girl in a rape dungeon.
I mean it's not gorn at least.
It was either that or Fraternite as my proper entry point for fucked up ClockUp titles. I played the demo of Euphoria and didn’t enjoy it very much, and Maggot Baits really doesn’t appeal to me-the furthest I’ll go in terms of guro is Gore Screaming Show (one of my favourite visual novels I’ve ever played).
 
Staffer Case and Staffer Reborn are getting JP voiceovers next month on PC.

It was originally a Switch version perk, but they worked out the license so they could have it on PC, but the price of both games will increase slightly as a result.

If you already own the games, you're getting those for free.
 
One of SCA-ji's first visual novels and the basis for Subahibi, Tsui no Sora, finally has an english translation! They recreated the entire game in RenPy and it has dual language selection. My only complaint is that the text font looks pretty ugly for english.
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Finished Aiyoku no Eustia and Witch on the Holy Night recently.

Witch on the Holy Night was great. I'd recommend it to anyone. It's popular enough that I wouldn't say anything that hasn't already been said about it.

Eustia was a good fantasy story that really didn't need any of the routes other than the true/main route in the ladder. The ending is controversial and I can definitely see why. It's not a terrible ending or anything since you can see what's going to happen from a mile away and I feel like it fits thematically but the way the writing goes about it is kinda clumsy.

Other than that I could generally say it's more of a good "popcorn" experience rather than something you sit down and appreciate as a classic like some other better fantasy VNs.

I've heard Sen no Hatou is is bit better fantasy/adventure from August and since it's also been translated I may try that out next.
 
As much as I make fun of multihour vids, I enjoy Bowl of Lentils. Here's his newest vid on "sound novels"
It's kinda crazy how horror has fallen off so hard in this genre despite kind of being the ur theme. Feels like there's very few good spooky VNs to play.
 
It's kinda crazy how horror has fallen off so hard in this genre despite kind of being the ur theme. Feels like there's very few good spooky VNs to play.
There's a lot if you're willing to learn Japanese or fiddle around with translators like Shigatsu Youka, I also believe Raging Loop's developers is making a horror VN that should be localized.
 
I'm happy to report that an obscure game I played the beta for has finally come out

Whispers from the Rift

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It sells itself as an experience where your reading the thoughts of a spec ops soldier in an alternate timeline and taking command of him.

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The thing is, this soldier still has some free will and doesn't realize you're in his head. You have the choice of helping him complete his mission or making him do stupid shit with realistic consequences. Good writing and heavy subject matter. In the version I played I had to cut some poor bastards fingers off to get the good ending.

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Hope you enjoy, it's only 8 bucks.
 
Finished Hira Hira Hihiru. It's a character drama light alternate history about 1900's Japan in a world where people can suffer from a disease called Aerodema, where the person clinically dies before reawakening several hours later with escalating brain damage and necrosis, but with modern western medicine being able to slow and mitigate those conditions. The plot is mainly exploring the setting, doing it in a really well done way of the Aerodema patients being treated as lepers/ghouls due to cultural and historical reasons, being forced to live in horrific conditions or even killed due to it.

It's a good read with a very realistic, but not cynical tone, and the occasional light hearted moments. I could imagine how society would act in the way it does, and I really liked the argument that caring for people in those conditions would erode their carer's love until only resentment remains, and it is not something so easy to solve with moving them to shelters/hospitals. It would probably hit hard for readers who know people with Alzheimer/autism. It isn't too long, but it does stick with you. So I recommend it.
 
Axanael is pure kino and my only regret is not reading it later on into learning Japanese because some of the jokes fly over my head. It's the VN equivalent of Durarara with it taking place between 6 characters in Akihabara as goofy shit happens to all of them. It rarely takes itself seriously but when it does it surprisingly handles it well. It has a lot of cool details and the character interactions are top notch so far. It's also really easy for those learning the language with 95% of all lines being voiced. If you're at all interested, I'd recommend giving the fan translated Demo a shot. It's about an hour or two of content iirc and it gives a general idea of how the VN is. I'm also surprised that the person who wrote this did Mojika too because this one is actually good.

I'm still not finished with it yet, but I think I'm really going to miss it when it's gone.

EDIT: the clip I had cut off the audio whoops my bad.
 
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Finished Staffer Case, it's fun but not really excelling in any way. It's an Ace Attorney style in a world where people with Jojo-esque special abilities exist (don't be confused by usage of magic/supernatural in describing it, every magical character/item has one trick that can be very circumstantial), you play as a normie in a government detective agency that mainly deals with people and objects with those types of abilities. I originally started it about a month ago, but now they added a voice pack so I finished it.

The gameplay itself is alright and pretty standard, needing to tie in bullshit powers to events while you get evidence by coworkers with their own brand of specific powers. Biggest issue in gameplay is that sometimes it's not clear what kind of contradiction you are looking for while there are multiple contradictions to point out, or having very similar sentences to compare with despite them all being rather similar, it's just frustrating. The cases themselves are pretty high quality once you start to solve the multiple contradictions showed.

My main issue is that it's unmemorable. The game never dwells on the characters or the city, which really hurts it when those character interactions and life in the city is the backbone of the plot. A lot of revelations could have been way more impactful if the game spent some time building them up beforehand, for example one case deals with people raising magically mutated creatures for meat, which only comes up 2 minutes before showing the case, rather than being talked about in the episode prior (or being common knowledge). The whole city of London with magical people is never interacted with, which makes prejudice suffered by those people fall into the "tell, don't show" category. The government itself comes across as cartoonishly evil for no real reason, but it's never really shown. The game also does the usual sin of having an alternate history without any changes, despite those type of people would be massive, ESPECIALLY when you are dealing with Cold War Britain where you'd think most of the plot will deal in using the magical people for spying. But even if the writers don't want to jump into that rabbit hole, it should be a massive deal from a history and religious front.

The main cast is unfortunately very stock, and it doesn't help the main character gets constantly fellated for being smart despite coming to rather plain conclusions at the same speed as the reader. None of the characters are bad, but there's a reason people still remember Ace Attorney's cast 2 decades later, while I doubt I'd remember anyone in a week.

Overall it's good for a puzzle experience, and hopefully the devs expand on what works in the sequel and get better with the writing.
 
Update on Gnosia, was doing my little loops till in a random event, ended up in a situation where valley girl and main character see peacock faggot in the shower (clearly a fucking man) and then proceeded to sperg on both characters about how he's non binary. Fucking refunded. I have my tolerance to faggotry, but the moment there is a "character looks at camera" moment, they can all fuck off and die. I'll just read a wiki or whatever to get a plot summary, was starting to get repetitive anyway.
I wonder if that's localization bullshit or if it was in the original Japanese version. I feel like it's wokealizer shenanigans. Regardless, glad to know I can skip that shit now.
 
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