The Gay Tag Review
Gay needle: unmistakably 100% gay with plenty of gay characters around (mostly restricted to the twink/twunk category)
Hear me out: you are a famous young guy in a boy band with other siblings that moves to a Caribbean-style island, where your family seem to control everything more or less, mafioso-style, with the whole family. Yes, you're very rich. But you don't only have to worry about fitting in the new high school, but also... control your magic powers because apparently you belong to a family of mages that can also open a portal to another fantasy world.
Yeah, it sounds like the author threw everything and the kitchen sink in the plot, but surprisingly somehow it kinda works. Currently, the fantasy part is less developed than the Earth part, but the overall feeling is more quirky than insane. It's a pleasant story.
The characters are cute, not extremely deep but not cardboard-thin either. Graphics are also well done, without being spectacular: people that have played 3D VNs will feel at home.
Mechanics-wise, it's a mostly a standard visual novel with dialogues and choices, with some variations brought by a quest log to keep track of the various storylines and a (rather basic, for now) combat system in the fantasy world.
In conclusion, it doesn't reinvent the wheel but it gives a good time, keeps you curious to continue and has some hot scenes. A solid work
Gay needle: unmistakably 100% gay with plenty of gay characters around (mostly restricted to the twink/twunk category)
Hear me out: you are a famous young guy in a boy band with other siblings that moves to a Caribbean-style island, where your family seem to control everything more or less, mafioso-style, with the whole family. Yes, you're very rich. But you don't only have to worry about fitting in the new high school, but also... control your magic powers because apparently you belong to a family of mages that can also open a portal to another fantasy world.
Yeah, it sounds like the author threw everything and the kitchen sink in the plot, but surprisingly somehow it kinda works. Currently, the fantasy part is less developed than the Earth part, but the overall feeling is more quirky than insane. It's a pleasant story.
The characters are cute, not extremely deep but not cardboard-thin either. Graphics are also well done, without being spectacular: people that have played 3D VNs will feel at home.
Mechanics-wise, it's a mostly a standard visual novel with dialogues and choices, with some variations brought by a quest log to keep track of the various storylines and a (rather basic, for now) combat system in the fantasy world.
In conclusion, it doesn't reinvent the wheel but it gives a good time, keeps you curious to continue and has some hot scenes. A solid work