Our first review of an original English-language ONScripter visual novel covers The Dandelion Girl: Won’t You Remember Me, a short kinetic novel based on Robert F. Young’s 1961 short story, The Dandelion Girl.
Having already written about aesthetics and hair color in Days With My Stepsister, I figured that I may as well review the whole season.
I invite you as my guest to read about Google seeing how far it can push its luck with YouTube ads before “users” start finding other ways to spend their internet time.
When you see an odd-looking bug inside your building for about five consecutive days, there is only one thing to do (after repeatedly forgetting). It’s time to be a hero.
My four part May Sky analysis concludes with a trip to the mountains and, apparently, snow in the hot month of August.
In part 3 of my 4-part May Sky story analysis, a salary man displays poor social skills in breaking news and expressing his feelings to a mercurial teenage part-time shrine maiden.
In part 2 of my 4-part May Sky visual novel analysis, a salaryman and shrine maiden fight about feelings, social decorum, and root vegetables.
A U.S.-centric take on how to localize Japanese high school classes in a way that is intelligible for readers familiar with 4-year high school systems.
I use textual evidence in May Sky to induce that it almost certaintly takes place in 2005 and 2006.
The first of a four-part in-depth analysis of the script of May Sky, one of the best of the 31 visual novel localizations to come out of al|together. A lonely newly-minted salary man meets a mercurial teenage shrine maiden…
April showers bring May flowers; August showers bring August mushrooms (or so says my photographic evidence).
Did I really write an entire article about the Belarusian government’s allegations that Pokémon GO is a spy tool in order to deliver a pun?