While it has its charm, for a game flagged as "Completed" this has serious drawbacks.
The Good:
The writing is clear, with a reasonable approximation of proper English grammar & spelling.
Despite having only a few lines of dialog each, the authors have managed to give each character a semblance of a distinct personality, albeit often a one-dimensional cliche that seems like it belongs in a 50's TV western.
The Bad:
There's more character depth here than the classic 1-line NPC, but not by much.
Character interactions are short: Any given relationship tends to consist of a quiz-like initial conversation, then if you get the answers right, you're rewarded with a single short scene of social interaction, and a single short sex scene (as in 2 or 3 images and perhaps a dozen lines of dialog).
In most cases there seems to be no further interaction possible after a character's first tiny little scene, so if it takes you more than 20 seconds to fap, you're not going to get any satisfaction here.
The Ugly:
The graphics seem to be intentionally awful. In a time of photo-realistic AI-generated images and dazzling 3D renders, this game features blown-up (pixelated) low-res sprites. If it weren't for the non-matching art styles, they would look right at home in a low-budget Nintendo game from the late 1980s.
Plot-wise this is better than Custer's Revenge, but honestly the graphics are at a pretty similar level of quality.
In Conclusion:
I'm not sure who the intended audience is: This game features no puzzles, no real plot, no significant romance or eroticism and no excitement. Maybe it was somebody's attempt to learn Ren'Py and they decided to publish it as a joke?
In some ways, I feel like the best thing I can say about it is that if you play to see 100% of the scenes, you've probably only wasted 20 minutes or so of your life and a few hundred MB of bandwidth (which is weird, considering I've seen far better graphics in games that came out on 1.4MB floppy disks. I assume poor compression is to blame).
The Good:
The writing is clear, with a reasonable approximation of proper English grammar & spelling.
Despite having only a few lines of dialog each, the authors have managed to give each character a semblance of a distinct personality, albeit often a one-dimensional cliche that seems like it belongs in a 50's TV western.
The Bad:
There's more character depth here than the classic 1-line NPC, but not by much.
Character interactions are short: Any given relationship tends to consist of a quiz-like initial conversation, then if you get the answers right, you're rewarded with a single short scene of social interaction, and a single short sex scene (as in 2 or 3 images and perhaps a dozen lines of dialog).
In most cases there seems to be no further interaction possible after a character's first tiny little scene, so if it takes you more than 20 seconds to fap, you're not going to get any satisfaction here.
The Ugly:
The graphics seem to be intentionally awful. In a time of photo-realistic AI-generated images and dazzling 3D renders, this game features blown-up (pixelated) low-res sprites. If it weren't for the non-matching art styles, they would look right at home in a low-budget Nintendo game from the late 1980s.
Plot-wise this is better than Custer's Revenge, but honestly the graphics are at a pretty similar level of quality.
In Conclusion:
I'm not sure who the intended audience is: This game features no puzzles, no real plot, no significant romance or eroticism and no excitement. Maybe it was somebody's attempt to learn Ren'Py and they decided to publish it as a joke?
In some ways, I feel like the best thing I can say about it is that if you play to see 100% of the scenes, you've probably only wasted 20 minutes or so of your life and a few hundred MB of bandwidth (which is weird, considering I've seen far better graphics in games that came out on 1.4MB floppy disks. I assume poor compression is to blame).