I’m making a game! It’s going to be one of these three concepts, but I’d like outside opinions for which one is most appealing to people. Will be taking input until September 7, 2018. Trigger warnings in the Read More.
I’m leaning towards the last one but, tell me what you guys think. This will be a project done in a few months; I’ve just decided I need to do this. All games would be done in Ren’Py, so they’re all story-based. I have a lot of work to do once I pin down a game concept, but they’re all ideas I’m very passionate about bringing to life. Reblog, reply, or send me a message letting me know which one I should make! (Some of these topics may be unfit for some readers. Trigger warning for: slavery, racism, sexism, depression, death).
A choice-leading game where the player is in a fantasy setting as a young adult character who is bought by an orc after their home is raided, but instead of adjusting to a life of slavery the player discovers that the orc is running a slave-freeing operation in secret because they have yet to find a way to completely dismantle the slave trade. The player works with the orc to hunt down the leaders of the slave trade and free the people. Will give an option to romance the orc. Different endings result from how the player responds to the environment and other characters. Will involve and address topics of slavery, racism, sexism, enforced patriarchy, and consent.
A V/N about a university student who discovers they have the ability to enter people’s minds while they are asleep/unconscious, but doing so runs the risk of the protagonist’s body dying without their soul inhabiting it. The student explores these abilities with a cast of kind, resolute characters with diverse backgrounds and roles. Will involve and address topics such as depression, PTSD, mental illness, and death.
A dating sim starring a villain character who fights money-grabbing superheroes to take over the corporate government in a dystopian society. The story will follow the villain’s struggle against not only the powers ruling over the nation, but the people themselves as the villain is continuously used as a scapegoat for the government’s more obvious twisted schemes. Characters that the villain can romance include: the villain’s loyal but skeptical sidekick, the villain’s main superhero rival, a civilian volunteer who works to improve the lives of children in hospitals, and a secret romance path for people who want to focus on the main plot instead of the other branching dating routes. Will involve and address topics of corporate crimes, negative publicity, and general themes of bigotry? This one is more lighthearted but definitely not E for Everyone