While the peeks of areola and camera pans to women's backsides are still intended to be titillating, it's handled in a manner closer to cinema than that of a poorly produced pornography. Everything from the visceral and graphic violence (that still isn't over-the-top or overly glorified) to the nudity and sex scenes (albeit, only nude women as far as I ever saw) suggests the experience is targeted at adults. The Witcher, on the other hand, is a finely-crafted RPG intended for audiences who want a more mature take on fantasy. All accompanied by generally poor quality all around and questionable taste in the first place. Flashing breasts, potty humor, sexist undertones. impaired social skills with the opposite gender. This approach is generally targeted towards your recently pubescent males or adult males with. Leisure Suit Larry has never backed down from the subject of sex, but it approaches it in an infantile manner. First, let's discuss the second version (Sex-themed RPG)Ĭonsider Leisure Suit Larry (the newer ones) and The Witcher. There's quite a difference between the game you seem to describe in your first post vs a few posts later. I think the majority opinion has already been expressed, but I'll throw my two cents in as well. Simply adding tits to a cheap game won't cut it. I haven't played the game, but I know that it's a high quality product. So the two most important aspects are to a) deliver quality and b) budget your game accordingly. So, is there money to be made? Of course. not getting coverage from Kotaku, Polygon and the other usual suspects ![]() getting flak from the progressive dipshits because of "muh representation of women" (even though the development team was 50-80% female depending on whether you count voice actors or not) has - at the time of this post - sold 326,573 ± 12,317 copies (according to SteamSpy) It's a casual game being sold on Steam, a store mainly for core games. The game is basically bejeweled with sex. Is there money in it? HuniePop is a very good example in more ways than one. The Steam version is censored, but they offer an official uncut-patch through their website which is also linked in the Steam community's FAQ. I think that the best option would be to do it exactly as the HuniePop developers did it. (Ideally resulting in adult-only games generally being allowed on : ![]() I really wish Valve would do something to clear this up. HuniePop is an adult game and is available on Steam (and GOG). Hatred was rated AO and is available on Steam. ![]() It's not that Steam doesn't sell adult-only games, it's just that the conditions aren't really clear. Well, mature games have their own audience (which isn't restricted to merely pornography btw.
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