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Otome game; 0–9. 7'scarlet; 100 Sleeping Princes and the Kingdom of Dreams; A. Alice in the Country of Hearts; Amnesia (2011 video game) Angelique (video game series)
An otome game (Japanese: 乙女ゲーム, Hepburn: otome gēmu, lit. "maiden game") is a story-based romance video game targeted towards women with a female protagonist as the player character. Generally one of the goals, besides the main story goal, is to develop a romantic relationship between the female main player character and one of the ...
An international remake of Hatoful developed by Mediatonic and published by Devolver Digital made using the Unity game engine—allowing the game to be fully compatible with computers that run Windows Vista, Windows 7 or OS X 10.6, and playable for the first time on those that run Linux or OS X 10.7 or newer—was first revealed to be in ...
(乙女的恋革命ラブレボ!!, Girlish Love Revolution Love Revo!!) is an otome game originally released in 2006 for the PlayStation 2. A manga adaptation has been made, and the manga is published in English by Yen Press as Ugly Duckling’s Love Revolution. [1] There are also drama CDs based on the story.
The project was greenlit by Nintendo in 2016. At the time, Buddy Mission Bond was intended to be a traditional Ruby Party otome game, however during the game's development, the scale of the project continuously grew, until it went beyond its initial goal. [10] Unlike Ruby Party's usual output, Buddy Mission Bond aimed for a wider appeal.
A Microsoft Windows version of Black Butterfly with English, Japanese, Korean, and traditional Chinese language options was published by Intragames and Idea Factory on November 15, 2018; [16] [17] a Windows version of Ashen Hawk, with the same language options, is planned to be released in Q1/Q2 2019.
Starry☆Sky (スターリースカイ, Sutārī Sukai) is a Japanese otome game series created and developed by software game company Honeybee and HuneX.Starry Sky is separated into four games, the first of which was released in 2008, with three love interests in each, for a total of twelve possible love interests across all four games.
According to Microsoft telemetry, Solitaire was among the three most-used Windows programs and FreeCell was seventh, ahead of productivity-based applications such as Microsoft Word and Excel. [7] [7] Lost business productivity by employees playing Solitaire became a common concern since the game was included in Windows by default. [8]