6 Selvaria Bles (Everlasting Summer) 25 Cm



This is a detailed guide about all the endings in the game. All of the characters feel like the same characters from the first game (even Ulyana still acts the same, although the game does acknowledge that it's odd behavior from someone her age) and the story, while simple, is a surprisingly strong one, giving a very good follow up on the original story that doesn't override the previous endings much (there's no character didn't get with you” stuff here: it's actually fairly open enough that you could feasibly believe that any of the good endings happened) while still offering a decent amount of replayability.

Frosty Kiss can be best summed up as an epilogue to Everlasting Summer, being a very short visual novel (I got the first ending in about ten minutes) which features the main female cast of the game (no cat girl or male characters make an appearance) and the protagonist of the previous game just celebrating in the new year.

The game contains 5 main character stories (routes) and 3 special stories, with 14 different endings. World War II has a very special place in the hearts of Russians, and the 1940s are a fairly common setting in Russian fiction, video games included. Sadly, some of the other good Russian games weren't as lucky.

So. Overall, you know, I had a really good time with Everlasting Summer. The standout parts of the game are the adventures on foot, which are designed as text quests, the forerunner genre of visual novels. I played the game in both English and Russian, but you definitely don't have to play in both languages in order to get the full story or anything like that.

I used it to practice Russian a bit, but stopped doing it after a couple of endings. The characters can be seen in bikinis, but although there are sex scenes in the game, the art of the English version never shows this. Semyon wakes up to a summer day and finds that the bus is empty, now parked in front of a VideoGames young pioneer camp called Sovyonok.

While the quality of the game and its English translation is very poor, traced character art and CGs of Nene Anegasaki, from the popular Japanese dating game series LovePlus, as well as the use of several pieces of non-commercial art without the original creators' permission, have made a lot of Steam users voice their complaints on the game's discussion forums.

For Slavya, Ulyana and Alisa, Semyon returns to the real world without them, but takes the lessons he learned from them (respectively, appreciating life and the people in it, taking joy in the world and following his passions, and that music is a passion worth pursuing) to heart and makes something of himself (is a happier and nicer person who gets out more, goes back to university and studies a topic he loves, learns to play the guitar again and founds his own band, eventually having their first big concert), eventually meeting the girls in the real world.

ES does however hold an edge on the others being the most unique in a couple ways, so even if it stays on the top of my somewhat short "played VN's" list, i wouldn't call it a favorite and opinions change with time. I played some scenes in the dead of night, and I got really creeped out and a little scared because of the music.

A lot of games start us off with amnesia, but Who Am I goes all the way with the premise. It is not so common to have effects like these for indie visual novels games, but they did it really well. It wasn't too difficult and time consuming to get through all the different route and endings.

The Harem Ending seems to imply that Semyon is able to collapse the alternate realities, as he retains his memories of all his other lives — and so do the girls, all of whom have gathered to see him again in the real world. SlotsUp is the next generation gaming website with free casino games aimed to provide the review on all online slots.

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