CountVanBadger
Pootis Spencer Here
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2025
- Messages
- 335
- Points
- 93
A week or so ago, I mentioned that I was interested in making a visual novel someday. My exposure to VNs is pretty limited. I've played (and loved) the Phoenix Wright games, but those are so different from "normal" VNs that they practically don't count.
I played a couple hours of Doki Doki Literature Club and wasn't a fan, and it kinda falls into the same category as Phoenix Wright where it breaks so many VN rules that it might not even count.
I played through most of the first Utawarerumono game and enjoyed it, but I enjoyed it in spite of a lot of the tropes that are pretty common in VNs--primarily the part where a boring Gary Stu with the personality of a bowl of cold oatmeal accidentallies himself into a harem of beautiful women. Game-with-stupidly-long-name is also pretty well known for being one of the more "professional" VNs, once again putting it in the same boat as the previous two games, even though it's more of a traditional VN than they are.
I wanted to get a better idea of what a "normal" VN was like, so I downloaded Sable's Grimoire on my Switch. It doesn't have any puzzle solving, no Final Fantasy Tactics-style combat chapters, and no...whatever you call what DDLC did. Just a branching story told via static character models. It's not super well known, but what I could find about it sounded promising, so I have it a try and...
Holy crap, it reads like something I would read on Fanfiction.net! It's not the absolute worst thing I've ever read, but I don't think I've read a single line of dialogue that sounds like something an actual person would say. It also has the "Human Oatmeal Gets a Harem" problem, but I knew that going in, so I can't really blame the game for that.
But that's got me wondering. Is this really the standard for VNs? Webnovels and litrpgs I can understand since most of them are free, but are people really okay with this level of quality on something they pay money for, like VNs? Because if so, maybe I should devote some of my time into making my own. If I can be even a little bit better than what's popular, then that should mean guaranteed success, right? (It'll be my fallback plan if winning the Powerball doesn't pan out)
What do you guys think? Are VN standards really this low, or have I just had bad luck picking them out so far?
I played a couple hours of Doki Doki Literature Club and wasn't a fan, and it kinda falls into the same category as Phoenix Wright where it breaks so many VN rules that it might not even count.
I played through most of the first Utawarerumono game and enjoyed it, but I enjoyed it in spite of a lot of the tropes that are pretty common in VNs--primarily the part where a boring Gary Stu with the personality of a bowl of cold oatmeal accidentallies himself into a harem of beautiful women. Game-with-stupidly-long-name is also pretty well known for being one of the more "professional" VNs, once again putting it in the same boat as the previous two games, even though it's more of a traditional VN than they are.
I wanted to get a better idea of what a "normal" VN was like, so I downloaded Sable's Grimoire on my Switch. It doesn't have any puzzle solving, no Final Fantasy Tactics-style combat chapters, and no...whatever you call what DDLC did. Just a branching story told via static character models. It's not super well known, but what I could find about it sounded promising, so I have it a try and...
Holy crap, it reads like something I would read on Fanfiction.net! It's not the absolute worst thing I've ever read, but I don't think I've read a single line of dialogue that sounds like something an actual person would say. It also has the "Human Oatmeal Gets a Harem" problem, but I knew that going in, so I can't really blame the game for that.
But that's got me wondering. Is this really the standard for VNs? Webnovels and litrpgs I can understand since most of them are free, but are people really okay with this level of quality on something they pay money for, like VNs? Because if so, maybe I should devote some of my time into making my own. If I can be even a little bit better than what's popular, then that should mean guaranteed success, right? (It'll be my fallback plan if winning the Powerball doesn't pan out)
What do you guys think? Are VN standards really this low, or have I just had bad luck picking them out so far?