DDD72

Newbie
Dec 17, 2019
41
17
96
Sad really, I only played this game for Sophia and Sister Eve, so I'm really not losing much. But this game had potential.
 

Cernunnos.

Well-Known Member
May 27, 2017
1,550
4,258
518
Well, not a surprise. Dev became distant and update schedule speed kept on deteriorating without any reason. Content-wise, the main girls weren't getting any attention either.
Yeah, great looking game but it'd been on the decline now for a couple years. Promised features vanishing into the aether, complicated additions that were (for me certainly) unwelcome and unneeded, and a rising antagonism from the dev. I hope the Dev is alright during this communications blackout.
 

Kaintfm

Newbie
Apr 26, 2021
96
681
207
Guess we'll never know the conclusion to that damned church investigation if this continues to be abandoned. Should've finished that one first rather than adding that creepy ass ending with that corner whore.
Unrelated to the main topic, but what game is Amelie from in your signature?
 

tooldev

Active Member
Feb 9, 2018
874
843
184
whether or not any given dev follows the vers coventions, NORMAL programming convention is vers.01 for an initial "proof of concept" type release. Then .X for major updates, generally understood by default to be in approx 10% increments toward project completion. A game vers .53 for ex, would indicate approx 1/2 completed with 3 minor updates/bugfixes applied. Vers 1.0, indicates a completed project; possibly pending bug fixes, but intended content is done.
There is no such thing as 'vers conventions'. Versioning in software development is as old as programming itself and what you consider normal isnt normal for a majority of software developers at all. Versioning used to be set on a variety of things until semantic versioning became the main trend across all types of software development (aka Major.Minor.Patch). Your example is a very specific way of certain studios or developers but most certainly not something that applies to a majority in software development. Your example is actually best used to explain why there is semantic versioning in the first place as it uses a common way of versioning that can be applied to any software product regardless of type.
 

RDFozz

Active Member
Apr 1, 2022
805
1,111
201
Please note - the game has been tagged as "Abandoned" based on the rules of this site. One of those rules is, if there's no communication from the developer for more than three months regarding the status of the game, it is considered to be abandoned. To the best of my knowledge, this is not a case of the developer announcing that work on the game has been halted.

It's certainly possible that the dev will release a new update tomorrow.

However, historically, it's never a good sign when the dev stops updating his patrons on the status of his work for several months.

The developer's Patreon site is still present. The developer's Discord is still up and running. The developer might be hard at work on a new version - or have died - or have been kidnapped by a rogue tribe of giant pygmy penguins and dragged off to darkest Antarctica. We simply dont know.
 
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