So, this review is mostly for Season One, though it will touch upon part of Season Two as well. If you want review for both seasons combined, read elsewhere, as this isn't (technically) that. I'll explain.
I would give Lust Theory Season One (aka Echoes of Lust) 5 out of 5 stars, I thought it was well-executed, and if you buy the game's initial premise, everything else just flows from there.
I know, some people don't care about story, they're just here for the sex animations or whatever, but honestly if that's all you want, there are easier, less bandwidth and time-consuming ways of seeing that. But whatever, everyone has different tastes/goals, I can only speak for myself.
But for me personally, the only reason to play an adult visual novel is to get invested/engrossed in the story/situation in a way that straight-up porn or animations don't provide. It's the same as playing an adventure game vs. watching a movie (which some people also don't understand the point of, but that's nothing to do with this review.)
The point being, from both an animation perspective, visuals, story, voices, and interface standpoint, I give season one five stars. Some parts here and there were maybe a little tedious bordering on semi-grindy, but not enough to adversely affect the score, and if anything it just makes it that much more rewarding when everything works out properly.
I might have deducted half a star for the MC being stupid on the last day, but I understand that was setting up things for later. Though for being an allegedly good student, he was rather dense at times.
But on the generous scale of "porn game writing", it was fine.
Which brings us to Season Two, aka why this is four stars overall, aka why this is mostly a review for season one.
I give season two 3/5 stars, which is me trying to be generous in light of the fact that I have not technically finished playing season two, because I just couldn't be bothered. So much so that I was compelled to exit the game and come here and see "Is it just me? Or is anyone else a little bored/annoyed by this?" And lo and behold, I was not.
Because I didn't make it all the way through season two, there are elements I can't speak to, that others have covered more thoroughly, so check those out elsewhere. But the short version, and why I stopped playing, is two-fold: one, the MC feels SO much dumber this time around, maybe due to "cabin fever" of being cooped up in events, but he's the one who decided to just slightly vary things. And the "don't have to go there/talk to them/do that" feature of season one, which was fine there, is ramped up here to a degree where I almost wonder why I'm given any choices, because many times there's only one or two things that CAN be done at a given time, so why even have me jump the MC through the navigation/clicking hoops.
Secondly, the LI's from season one have seemingly been rewound in their interest levels. I get that this is perhaps the easiest way to re-gamify progress with them, but it just feels weird when, to use Cosplay Girl as an example, she goes from willing to do all sorts of sexual things with the MC in season one, to not wanting to seem easy in season two.
Do I think that warrants it a 1 or 2 star rating? Nah. Not only because it earns goodwill for season one, but also it kept me mostly engaged through what I'm guessing was chapter 4 or 5 of season 2. (At time of this review, chapter 9 is out, and based on what I've read, I haven't played 8 or 9, and not sure I ever will.)
If Inceton adds full voice acting for S2, then I might give the full thing a go later, because I enjoyed that aspect of S1 (though I realize not everyone did), but until then I'm walking away from this one, with as much of a good impression of it intact as I can.
So, the 4 stars is an average of season 1 (5 stars) and season 2 (3 stars), the breakdown of the latter being graphics (5/5), sound (3/5), animation (5/5), interface-gameplay (3/5), and story (1/5). (So really a 3.4, but that's not a choice.)
I would give Lust Theory Season One (aka Echoes of Lust) 5 out of 5 stars, I thought it was well-executed, and if you buy the game's initial premise, everything else just flows from there.
I know, some people don't care about story, they're just here for the sex animations or whatever, but honestly if that's all you want, there are easier, less bandwidth and time-consuming ways of seeing that. But whatever, everyone has different tastes/goals, I can only speak for myself.
But for me personally, the only reason to play an adult visual novel is to get invested/engrossed in the story/situation in a way that straight-up porn or animations don't provide. It's the same as playing an adventure game vs. watching a movie (which some people also don't understand the point of, but that's nothing to do with this review.)
The point being, from both an animation perspective, visuals, story, voices, and interface standpoint, I give season one five stars. Some parts here and there were maybe a little tedious bordering on semi-grindy, but not enough to adversely affect the score, and if anything it just makes it that much more rewarding when everything works out properly.
I might have deducted half a star for the MC being stupid on the last day, but I understand that was setting up things for later. Though for being an allegedly good student, he was rather dense at times.
But on the generous scale of "porn game writing", it was fine.
Which brings us to Season Two, aka why this is four stars overall, aka why this is mostly a review for season one.
I give season two 3/5 stars, which is me trying to be generous in light of the fact that I have not technically finished playing season two, because I just couldn't be bothered. So much so that I was compelled to exit the game and come here and see "Is it just me? Or is anyone else a little bored/annoyed by this?" And lo and behold, I was not.
Because I didn't make it all the way through season two, there are elements I can't speak to, that others have covered more thoroughly, so check those out elsewhere. But the short version, and why I stopped playing, is two-fold: one, the MC feels SO much dumber this time around, maybe due to "cabin fever" of being cooped up in events, but he's the one who decided to just slightly vary things. And the "don't have to go there/talk to them/do that" feature of season one, which was fine there, is ramped up here to a degree where I almost wonder why I'm given any choices, because many times there's only one or two things that CAN be done at a given time, so why even have me jump the MC through the navigation/clicking hoops.
Secondly, the LI's from season one have seemingly been rewound in their interest levels. I get that this is perhaps the easiest way to re-gamify progress with them, but it just feels weird when, to use Cosplay Girl as an example, she goes from willing to do all sorts of sexual things with the MC in season one, to not wanting to seem easy in season two.
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Do I think that warrants it a 1 or 2 star rating? Nah. Not only because it earns goodwill for season one, but also it kept me mostly engaged through what I'm guessing was chapter 4 or 5 of season 2. (At time of this review, chapter 9 is out, and based on what I've read, I haven't played 8 or 9, and not sure I ever will.)
If Inceton adds full voice acting for S2, then I might give the full thing a go later, because I enjoyed that aspect of S1 (though I realize not everyone did), but until then I'm walking away from this one, with as much of a good impression of it intact as I can.
So, the 4 stars is an average of season 1 (5 stars) and season 2 (3 stars), the breakdown of the latter being graphics (5/5), sound (3/5), animation (5/5), interface-gameplay (3/5), and story (1/5). (So really a 3.4, but that's not a choice.)