I’ve never played a visual novel, but this one has gotten some hype I haven’t seen for others. It also feels like one of those games that I should be careful not to spoil, because it looks like it has layers under the surface. Could someone help explain why I should or shouldn’t play this game in my position, without scraping away any of those hidden layers?
Slay the Princess’ endgame is now bigger and stranger with more choices and over 3000 words of new dialogue
Submitted 7 months ago by ZippyBot@lemmy.zip [bot] to gaming@lemmy.zip
Comments
alilbee@lemmy.world 7 months ago
fqdnDOTcom@lemmy.world 7 months ago
It is a visual novel only in the sense that it is a story focused game and the gameplay loop consists of characters speaking and you (the player) choosing dialog responses and choices that drive the game forward. It is not in any way like the visual novels that are anime relationship simulators which most people think of when they hear the term visual novel.
It’s a very thoughtful indie game that sets a narrow scope for itself and then thoroughly explores that space with a bunch of crazy ideas. And the voice actors do a great job bringing life to those ideas with a very dynamic performance that’s really the star of the show.
You can get a very good sense of what the game is going for in about 1-3 hours and you can see the whole game in about ten (not including the new stuff, I haven’t played any of that yet).
alilbee@lemmy.world 7 months ago
It comes off as a very advanced/fancy “choose your own adventure” book. Is that accurate?
DinosaurThussy@hexbear.net 7 months ago
I just finished this last month. What a lovely game. Gotta try out the update.
nick@midwest.social 7 months ago
Hell yeah i loved this game, even though it’s way outside my normal kind of games (factorio and its ilk)