Scrolling through a menu and selecting all the options until an event is triggered is not my idea of fun. I don't like Japanese-style adventures because I find their gameplay ridiculously unfulfilling. The writing in the translated version is very good, by far surpassing even the best examples of eroge adaptations in English. The translation patch (you can find it in the Links section) is an absolute necessity if your Japanese is less than excellent it also adds voice-overs from the Saturn version to the Windows release. Fifteen years after its original release, Yu-No finally got translated into English by a devoted and talented team. It is also considered the magnum opus of Hiroyuki Kanno, the designer of Eve Burst Error and other notable adult Japanese adventures. Yu-No is a Japanese-style adventure created by Elf, a leading eroge developer best known in the West for its funny little RPG Knights of Xentar. Games with original fan translations into English.The Saturn version still contains erotic images and innuendo, but no nudity and/or explicit sexual situations. The game's original PC-98 and Windows releases feature explicit sex scenes. The interaction with the game world does not involve menu commands, as in most Japanese adventures (except in the prologue) instead, a point-and-click interface is used. If a path leads to a dead end, the player can opt to use a stone, go back, and investigate another place to lead the story into a different direction. Yu-No: Kono Yo no Hate de Koi o Utau Shōjo (the sub-title meaning A Girl Who Chants Love At the Bound of This World) is a Japanese-style adventure (still screens viewed from first-person perspective, a lot of dialogue) with a unique feature: multiple story paths are shown on a special map and can be accessed within the same playing session, by using orbs like the one Takuya finds in his home at the beginning of the game. Is his father alive, after all? If so, where is he? Meetings and conversations with many beautiful women, as well as a suspenseful investigation await Takuya! At first Takuya doesn't take it seriously, but soon he realizes that he possesses a device that allows him to travel to an alternate universe. During a summer vacation Takuya discovers a strange orb in his father's room, along with a letter containing information about the existence of a parallel world. Takuya Arima is a young student whose father, a historian who has conducted various researches, disappeared recently.
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