Synopsis
Haruto Takamiya, a college student, is asked to help with work and visits the company where his sister is employed—only to be shocked to discover it’s an adult game studio!
His sister works at the eroge company ‘Ramune Soft,’ and their current project is in full swing. They need all hands on deck, and Haruto can’t bring himself to refuse. Despite having zero experience, he starts working at Ramune Soft.
But there’s a twist: all of Ramune Soft’s staff are women. Surrounded by talented and charming women passionate about game development, can Haruto find the kind of wonderful romance you’d see in a game?
[Version 1.1 patch already applied]
Editorial Review
This is a workplace romance comedy that flips the meta-narrative angle favored in recent doujin visual novels: instead of the protagonist being immersed in a game world, he’s inserted into the real-world machinery that creates them. It’s a clever structural conceit that positions adult game development itself as the romantic playground, distinguishing it from the standard harem setup where attraction happens incidentally around a central plot.
What makes this work distinctive is its deliberate animation focus combined with the all-female studio environment. The tags promise substantial CG work and cosplay elements, which suggests the developers are investing in visual spectacle beyond static renders—a production commitment that’s increasingly rare in the crowded adult game market. The inclusion of family relations (his sister) creates domestic friction that grounds the fantasy premise in plausible awkwardness, while the lactation and well-endowed tags signal the work isn’t shying away from specific physical aesthetics. Rather than spreading appeal thin across multiple body types, this has a clearly defined visual identity.
The “game-like romance” framing in the title is the thematic anchor. Haruto isn’t passively receiving romantic advancement; the narrative seems designed around him actively navigating multiple female characters within a space that explicitly mirrors the games he’d normally consume. That recursive quality—a game about making games while pursuing romance—gives it conceptual weight beyond typical workplace scenario fare.
This appeals most to players who appreciate both meta-narrative premises and strong production values, particularly those who find the workplace setting and creative industry backdrop more compelling than isolated dungeon crawls or fantasy scenarios. The animation tag and CG emphasis signal this isn’t a text-heavy visual novel either.
A genuinely novel setup executed with visible production care. The workplace setting and creative-industry backdrop elevate it above standard harem fare, making it worth investigating for anyone tired of more conventional romantic fantasy premises.
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Related Tags:
Animation | cosplay | lactation | Romance Comedy | mature content
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