Taffy Tales, a game not for everyone.
Taffy Tales puts you in the shoes of a protagonist-turned-antagonist that is hit by a car, and the damage caused results in him developing a split personality disorder - which is basically his Ego not being deterred, and taking over his normal, whimpy self.
The game is depicted in a cartoonish fashion, with very soft shading and low saturation both in the characters and in the environment - this gives the game its dark, gritty, malevolent aura that not everyone appreciates. To me, it signals the ill intentions and devilishness of the protagonist controlled by his Ego and fits the story of corruption, decay and venality as he coaxes, blackmails and manipulates several characters into doing things for his own pleasure.
It's not a fuzzy, cuddly game and it doesn't shy away from themes like bullying, transphobia, racism, non-consensual sex, molestation, NTR, harassment and aggression. In this town, which the game is named after, there is no romance for the main character, no hand holding, no declarations of love - just manipulation, competition and underlined havoc.
And that's fine. There are plenty of household-incest games out there. Plenty of games where you date, romance and make love to girls, whether they are in your family or not, plenty of games where you talk about your past, your feelings, your dead mother, where you help shy girls overcome their timidness, and where an older, stronger and mean female will end up with feelings for you.
Taffy Tales is not about that - it's a breath of fresh air into a corrupted but realistic world, with a deteriorated atmosphere and a main character with little more than ill intentions in mind; you are playing an antagonist, and you don't even need it in the game title (i.e. The Dark Tyrant of Darkness) nor in the description; you figure out which side you're on as you play.
With decent story writing, good art and an immense amplitude of characters to interact with, this game earned its five star rating.