It's like I want to read a comic book, except I want to have everything read to me and I just want to look at the pictures. It's the video game version of an audiobook basically and that's only if you find one's with English VO. Mostly they are Japanese only and it's like having people chirp in your ear while you try to read. How is this enjoyable.
I suppose I should explain myself. Over the weekend I tried two Visual Novel games on Playstation 4. Date Alive: Rio Reincarnation and YU-NO: A girl who chants love at the bound of this world. Both games I never heard of but apparently are parts of their own series.
Yu-No is the more interesting game so let's talk about that one first. I manages to "play" for about three hours of this one before I threw in the towel. This game acts like a point and click adventure sort of, where you are given a still image (usually with a character to talk to on it) with a mulitude of options to click on and get some dialog. For example you can click on a flower in the room and your character will say "It's a flower in the room", really insightful stuff. Anyway in Yu-No you play a Japanese student who's father is an esteemed history professor, and is also history himself because he's dead. You live alone now with your enitrely too young step-mother who probably becomes a romance option later, and you find yourself going to school. That's it really. Until you get a mysterious package from your dead dad which contains a device that can teleport you to parallel worlds.
Turns out the principal of your school was researching this thing with your dad, and he wants it for some reason. Enough to threaten you at gun point, at which point you are blinded by a flash and it's strongly suggested your tablet sends you to another world which is exactly the same as your previous world except people don't hate you here. So I'll take that as the good ending and not play any further because I'm bored.
Rio Reincarnation is a visual novel with a much more interesting premise, but even worse execution and writing. I'm going to be honest I only got about ten minutes into this one until I deleted it from my hard drive.
Basically you are a normal high school guy because of course you are. In a world plagued by something call Space Quakes you alone have the ability to seal away these otherworldly riffs. How? Dunno?
The intro has you get knocked out by one of these Space Quakes and you awaken in your room with an anime girl whining at you.
She asks if you are ok.
You say yes you are.
She insists that you should stay in bed until you are sure.
You insist that you are fine.
She wants to lay against your body while naked to heal you
You say, WTF?
Your sister comes is and asks how are you
You say fine.
Your sister suggests you should lay down with the naked girl
You insist you are fine and just want to know whats going on.
The naked girl asks if you are sure you are alright.
And I turned this trash off.
Seriously what fucking kind of writing is this? It's like anime filler before episode one of the plot can even happen. Why all the extra dialog?
Some visual novel style games I perfectly understand. Games like Conception (which I didn't end up liking)have the visual novel style storytelling but it's broken up by real gameplay. Yu-No and Rio-Reincarnation don't, the visual novel is all you get. Which means they aren't games, they can't be games, they are just comics that read themselves too you. Where is the enjoyment in these things? The engagement?
So the question for the forums is this.
Do you like Visual Novels? If so, why? What am I missing that makes these "games" clearly popular?
I suppose I should explain myself. Over the weekend I tried two Visual Novel games on Playstation 4. Date Alive: Rio Reincarnation and YU-NO: A girl who chants love at the bound of this world. Both games I never heard of but apparently are parts of their own series.
Yu-No is the more interesting game so let's talk about that one first. I manages to "play" for about three hours of this one before I threw in the towel. This game acts like a point and click adventure sort of, where you are given a still image (usually with a character to talk to on it) with a mulitude of options to click on and get some dialog. For example you can click on a flower in the room and your character will say "It's a flower in the room", really insightful stuff. Anyway in Yu-No you play a Japanese student who's father is an esteemed history professor, and is also history himself because he's dead. You live alone now with your enitrely too young step-mother who probably becomes a romance option later, and you find yourself going to school. That's it really. Until you get a mysterious package from your dead dad which contains a device that can teleport you to parallel worlds.
Turns out the principal of your school was researching this thing with your dad, and he wants it for some reason. Enough to threaten you at gun point, at which point you are blinded by a flash and it's strongly suggested your tablet sends you to another world which is exactly the same as your previous world except people don't hate you here. So I'll take that as the good ending and not play any further because I'm bored.
Rio Reincarnation is a visual novel with a much more interesting premise, but even worse execution and writing. I'm going to be honest I only got about ten minutes into this one until I deleted it from my hard drive.
Basically you are a normal high school guy because of course you are. In a world plagued by something call Space Quakes you alone have the ability to seal away these otherworldly riffs. How? Dunno?
The intro has you get knocked out by one of these Space Quakes and you awaken in your room with an anime girl whining at you.
She asks if you are ok.
You say yes you are.
She insists that you should stay in bed until you are sure.
You insist that you are fine.
She wants to lay against your body while naked to heal you
You say, WTF?
Your sister comes is and asks how are you
You say fine.
Your sister suggests you should lay down with the naked girl
You insist you are fine and just want to know whats going on.
The naked girl asks if you are sure you are alright.
And I turned this trash off.
Seriously what fucking kind of writing is this? It's like anime filler before episode one of the plot can even happen. Why all the extra dialog?
Some visual novel style games I perfectly understand. Games like Conception (which I didn't end up liking)have the visual novel style storytelling but it's broken up by real gameplay. Yu-No and Rio-Reincarnation don't, the visual novel is all you get. Which means they aren't games, they can't be games, they are just comics that read themselves too you. Where is the enjoyment in these things? The engagement?
So the question for the forums is this.
Do you like Visual Novels? If so, why? What am I missing that makes these "games" clearly popular?