Back Door Connection is a visual novel created by Doux with a silly narrative about a creepy young man who can’t control his impulses around an enormous cast of female characters. He uses his hacking skills to make the world a better place, all while navigating an endless sequence of nonsensical scenarios designed to appeal to those seeking brainless eye-candy. The game's plot is almost non-existent, clearly designed to focus on the developer’s favorite kink, working around flimsy excuses to display the content. If you're looking for more than just porn tied together by the thinnest narrative, this game is not for you. However, if you enjoy seeing hundreds of game-overs and reloading your save to push a girl’s limits while watching nearly identical scenes, this might be your thing. The story centers around a brilliant hacker who moves out of his family home, leaving behind his prodigal mother and two angry sisters. He starts a new life in a building populated by women with huge asses. As the story progresses, the protagonist attempts to grope every woman around him, with the player selecting actions in a trial-and-error mechanic that shows how far you can go. Some adversaries appear in the background, but their presence is minimal. The game also features simple mini-games for hacking, although it wastes the opportunity to actually explore coding in a meaningful way. The character models are quite similar to each other, decent, but nothing that would otherwise truly stand out. The curvaceous forms are a constant, and the protagonist enjoys testing the jiggle physics on all of them. The scenes, however, are very repetitive. You'll see the same images and animations over and over again, and the animations themselves are often ghoulish. As for the cast, the game boasts a large number of girls appearing in each chapter, meaning the developer prefers quantity over quality. The predictable result is shallow content for each character, forcing you to repeat the same damn steps for every new one. The developer also attempted to inject humor into the story, often disrupting the flow of the game, with jokes, internet memes, fourth-wall breaks, and constant alerts or instructions. A particularly annoying money-begging moment occurs after each chapter. Besides the car gif, nothing else made me laugh. Overall, this feels like an amateurish project. It offers a poor experience in terms of its plot, dialogue, characters, transitions, scenes, animation, scenarios, and even grammar. Even the core of the story is poorly designed: it’s hard to believe the protagonist is a hacker hero fighting for truth and justice, inspired by his wise mentor, while simultaneously drugging and abusing women. As of chapter six, Back Door Connection has too many flaws to be recommendable.