
Enough has been said about its most extreme content that has left serious psychological scars that are now forever implanted in my brain, but I also despised even the more tame scenes. The prime example of how not to write an eroge can be found in that of Starless: Nymphomaniac’s Paradise. I’ve ragged on this game time and time again so I don’t think it should be necessary to repeat myself. Yes, the intent of the game is kept in mind, but such a thing is just common sense when reviewing. If anything, I actually have far more respect for the eroge genre than most do because I don’t think that being an eroge justifies shitty writing or immaturity.

I don’t believe that it is doing direct harm or needs to be banned like the stereotypical angry triggered feminazi stereotype does, but rather I think that most porn… kinda sucks, and I don’t mean in the sexy way (although it does that to). While I am far from sex negative, I do tend to hold a lot of disdain for porn, or at the very least mainstream pornography. My own background as a feminist is one that makes me a lot more critical of certain aspects of this game than most of its target audience will care about. A review is merely one interpretation of the game in question, and one’s own interpretations will be based very heavily on their own backgrounds. One of the key reasons that I choose to do away with review scores is because some factors may be more or less important for some people than others. I did enjoy Meltys Quest overall, but there were also a lot of issues that I had with it, and those issues are ones that prevent me from giving it a blanket recommendation across the board. I can normally just place a game in the “good” or “bad” category and be done with it.

Meltys Quest is a bit of an oddity to me. Images are blurred but still sexual in nature. CW: Mentions of and references to strong sexual content, rape, incest, pedophilia, homophobia, biphobia, and domestic abuse.
