Operation Backlog Completion 2026
Jan 042017
 

The last game I played in 2016 was Muv-Luv, a visual novel recently made available in English for the first (official) time.

Muv-Luv is split into two parts: Muv-Luv Extra and Muv-Luv Unlimited.

Some people consider them separate games, but since they’re sold as a single game (and in the original Japanese version, you had to play Extra to unlock Unlimited), I decided to review them together.

Still, since they’re essentially two parallel games in one, let’s look at them one at a time.

Muv-Luv Extra

Muv-Luv Extra is a romantic comedy about a high school senior named Takeru who wakes up one morning to find a mysterious young woman in bed with him.

She’s a rich heiress who claims their destinies are bound together, and ridiculous antics ensue.

You know how shows like I Dream of Jeannie have the protagonist’s life change in insane, impossible ways they can’t possibly explain? Replace “magic” with “money” and you’ve got the vibe of Muv-Luv. For example, Meiya convinces Takeru’s entire neighborhood to move away and brings a legion of chefs to school to cook for him.

Meanwhile, Takeru’s childhood friend Sumika is none too pleased about Meiya’s attempts to win Takeru, which leads to a rivalry between them.

Routes with the other main female characters are available and take the story in quite different directions, but the core plot is about Takeru, Meiya, and Sumika.

Oh, and there’s a physics teacher named Yuuko, who is basically a mad scientist.

You might question why she’s allowed to dress like that for teaching high school, but Yuuko has a considerable amount of influence over everyone.

Several of the situations in Muv-Luv Extra are a bit contrived… but they’re often contrived by Yuuko, who loves manipulating people almost as much as she loves science.

Now, when I began the game, my first thought was that Takeru was a jerk. But I can deal with a jerk protagonist who gets better, and Takeru did grow on me (if nothing else, through sympathy as Meiya and her cohorts turn his life upside down).

I also had to smile every time Takeru referenced a video game, all of which are nods to real-world video games, such as his favorite stealth series, Rebel Gear Squalid (starring Squalid Drake).

Many people who played Extra shudder and sob over the lacrosse section, but while learning about lacrosse wasn’t the most fun ever, it still had enough silliness to entertain me.

Overall, Muv-Luv Extra was lighthearted romantic comedy fun. Some people recommend skipping it and going straight to Unlimited… but I disagree. It’s worth playing Extra at least once through Meiya or Sumika’s route before you move on. My understanding of the characters and the story in Extra made Unlimited mean much more to me.

Be warned: if you don’t know about the genre difference between Extra and Unlimited, and you don’t want to know it, stop reading now and just be content to know that I found Unlimited to be the more interesting of the two.

For everyone else, let’s continue on.

Muv-Luv Unlimited

Muv-Luv Unlimited begins during one of the final arcs of Extra, but quickly sets a different tone.

Takeru wakes up to find an empty neighborhood, a downed mech, and a military base in place of his school, where he’s promptly arrested for being suspicious.

He soon meets Yuuko… not the Yuuko he knows, but a scientist with great authority at Yokohama Base. Not only does she believe his story, but she also helps him adjust to the new world he’s found himself in.

This is a world where humanity is on the brink of annihilation at the hands of an alien race called the BETA.

Takeru joins the ranks of the cadets at Yokohama Base. They happen to be all of his old classmates, except for Sumika, who seemingly doesn’t exist in this world. Although he still hopes to return home, he slowly gets to know his fellow trainees and adjust to his new life.

In many ways, Muv-Luv Unlimited parallels Muv-Luv Extra.

Instead of high school classes, they take classes to learn how to fight, survive, and eventually pilot giant mecha called TSFs.

Instead of Meiya being a rich heiress trying to adjust to the lives of ordinary people, Takeru is the fish-out-of-water, a high school kid from our world trying to find his place in a grim universe where any teenager his age is expected to be ready to fight the BETA.

Instead of an important lacrosse tournament, the class is preparing for an exam that will qualify them to become TSF pilots.

It’s not all dark. There is still humor and romance. It still is, to some extent, a romantic comedy.

But it definitely has a grimmer tone. Yuuko, for example, is a more serious character… devoted to research, but not manipulative like her Extra self.

Takeru slowly comes to understand that the people around him are prepared and willing to give their lives to protect others. He undergoes true character development here in a way he couldn’t in Muv-Luv Extra.

While Extra was a fun story, Unlimited was an exciting one. I wanted to know more about the BETA, and I became invested in this mission to fight for humanity.

It ended in such a way that I felt satisfied, but also impatient to learn more. As a result, the sequel, Muv-Luv Alternative, is one of my most-anticipated games of the year.

People talk about Muv-Luv Alternative as though it’s the true reason to play the Muv-Luv series, and the first game is just a necessary step to get there. I disagree and say Muv-Luv is pretty interesting in its own right.

Both halves have their own appeal, and together they create a whole I’m happy I played. Or, well, read. It’s a visual novel, after all.

Are you interested in Muv-Luv?


Buy Muv-Luv from Steam

Dec 212016
 

A new Kickstarter has begun to localize the highly-acclaimed visual novel Dies Irae.

Dies Irae is described as “an urban fantasy battle opera,” although I’ve also heard people say its tone is quite literary.

From my understanding, a secret group of men and women known as the Longinus Dreizehn Orden perform a dark ritual during Berlin’s fall in 1945. Several decades later, in the modern era, they return and start the apocalypse.

It sounds very crazy and very interesting, and people say the villains (who are… superpowered Nazi sorcerers/demons?) are one of the game’s main highlights.

The Kickstarter is to translate the game and release it on Steam in two parts. Part 1 will have Kasumi and Marie’s routes, and Part 2 will have Kei and Rea’s routes. It takes 60+ hours to go through the whole thing, so each half will be quite substantial. According to the Q&A, choices will not be altered. You can still make choices in Part 1 that relate to a route only in Part 2, even though the Part 1 routes are your only options.

It will uncensor the violent scenes that were censored in the Japanese release, and there will also be an 18+ patch released later if you’re concerned about that. Finally, they’re hoping to release a digital PS Vita version as a stretch goal.

Currently, the Kickstarter is a bit over halfway to its funding goal.

I haven’t backed it yet, because I’m a little wary of those “literary” comments. Literary fiction and I often don’t get along. On the other hand, it sounds cool and I watched (read) some of the prologue and it seemed interesting.

What are your thoughts on Dies Irae? Are you going to back its localization? And if you’ve already played it, share your thoughts on it in the comments below. Convince me!

Update: I went for it.

Aug 032016
 

Steins;Gate-0-coverSteins;Gate 0 is due out in English later this year, and it’s now available to pre-order from Amazon for either the PS4 or PS Vita.

No official announcement has been made about its release date, but both Amazon listings say Steins;Gate 0 will be available on September 27, 2016.

It could be a placeholder, but if not, that’s great! September 27 isn’t too far away (although it is right on top of the release of Final Fantasy XV and Yo-kai Watch 2).

Steins;Gate 0 is sort of a midquel, following a particular timeline of Steins;Gate.

Click for major Steins;Gate spoiler
Remember how in the true ending, Okabe gets a D-Mail from his future self telling him how to save Kurisu? Steins;Gate 0 follows that first Okabe, who failed to save her.

By all accounts, Steins;Gate 0 is fantastic, with some people claiming it’s even better than the first one! This is one visual novel I have no qualms about pre-ordering.

If you’re unfamiliar with the series, check out my review of Steins;Gate to see why this is worthy of such excitement. Then play/read Steins;Gate, because it’s incredible.

In slightly related news, a potential release date for Root Letter, a mystery visual novel we discussed previously, surfaced on Amazon as well.

Are you excited for Steins;Gate 0?