Cross Worlds is a fantasy corruption game with VN and RPG aspects. You play as a guy who gets isekai'd, develops mind control powers and starts corrupting everyone around them.
The game's biggest weakness is definitely its lack of focus. The story advances through quests which have few choices and force you into either stat checks of the weak RPG system, or item checks which you'll immediately scroll back to fulfill. After a while, you'll be introduced to the corruption gameplay and everything else immediately takes a backseat.
Only... not enough of a backseat? The story portions of the game keep coming back even though it runs almost completely parallel to the corruption game, the two rarely acknowledging one another. It feels bizarre to be corrupting the town at one moment before being sent off to take out an unrelated cult in the next. It's very jarring.
On the bright side, the art is good. Technically it's a monster girl game, but the girls are only monstery in the loosest sense. So far there's a mushroom girl, a couple elves, an amazon, a goblin, a harpy (sorta), and an androgynous slime. There's futa and probably gay content if that's your thing, but it seems like the devs are pushing towards making it optional. Regardless, if you like what you see in the screenshots, there's more to be found in game.
I feel like the game has potential, but it needs to choose a lane. Cross Worlds could be a VN/RPG where you run quests, meet characters, and explore a fantasy world, or it could be a corruption game where you turn the girls of the town into debauched, slutty exhibitionists for fun. Running both simultaneously doesn't seem to be working and weakens both. Given that it's a sex game, I would definitely focus in on the corruption theme. The RPG and story aspects are extremely forgettable, but there's a good framework for a corruption game here.
Overall, Cross Worlds could be an excellent game if the devs figure out how to combine their story and their corruption. It has excellent art and some good scenes already, but it's heavily diluted by the random fantasy quests horning in on a perfectly good corruption game.