


Using the input method of your choosing, you can move two cursors around, each representing a hand of the unseen protagonist. It’s a shame that developer Honey Parade didn’t add VR support, as this could have bolstered the sense of immersion the game strives for. With eight keys assigned to camera control alone, you’ll probably spend just as much time looking at on-screen key bindings as you will admiring the game’s enchanting character models.

While the title supports keyboard and mouse input, you’ll definitely want to have a controller handy. Reflexions’ unsophisticated simulation of reflexology begins with Asuka extending her hands, as your disembodied pair of appendages gently supports them. But if your significant other finds the game on your Steam, a laidback shrug should probably end the admonishment. The leering shots of underboob and panties means that you won’t want to play this in public. Follow the on-screen prompts, and Asuka will emit a succession of suggestive moans, but in keeping with Japanese standards, no actual nudity is ever shown. But once you get down to the action, the puns disappear, forcing you to focus on the tasks ahem, at hand.įor those new to the ecchi games, know that content is quite suggestive, but never ventures into the pornographic.

Yes, the game will thank you for ‘coming’ more than a seventies-era James Bond babe. But in execution, dialog is too terse to produce much exposition and challenge from the scant number of mini-games is nearly non-existent.Īs if the heterographic ‘X’ in the title wasn’t enough to signify lasciviousness, an excess of double entendres ensure you’ll know that the game is about helping Asuka have an orgasm. Instead, play centers around giving Asuka and other DLC girls a message that’s so masterful, it allows self-reflextion to erupt. It’s far removed from the musou-style mechanics of the main series or even the girls’ exploration of the culinary arts. Regrettably, that’s not the case with the recent PC port of Senran Kagura Reflexions, originally released on the Switch nine month ago. But at least each divergence seemed built around an ambition for involving gameplay. From a Japan-only card battling title, Bon Appétit’s rhythm-based mini-games, Peach Beach Splash’s third-person, water-gunning, to an upcoming pinball game, the perpetually panty-revealing shinobi seem to be as risk for figurative and literal overexposure. Beyond five different manga series, two anime, and five mainline games, the property has prompted a number of interactive spin-offs. Since its 2011 debut, the Senran Kagura franchise has been remarkably prolific.
