Frosty Kiss Nerdcircleonline



The Russian Katawa Shoujo” is how Everlasting Summer was nicknamed by the visual novel community upon its English release in 2014, mostly due to how it originated as if spontaneously from an imageboard. For Slavya, Ulyana and Alisa, Semyon returns to the real world without them, but takes the lessons he learned from them (respectively, appreciating life and the people in it, taking joy in the world and following his passions, and that music is a passion worth pursuing) to heart and makes something of himself (is a happier and nicer person who gets out more, goes back to university and studies a topic he loves, learns to play the guitar again and founds his own band, eventually having their first big concert), eventually meeting the girls in the real world.

Also, as for the topic of this thread, I have a vague feeling that I liked Everlasting Summer when I first read it around the time it came out in English, but I don't really remember many details besides some little bits of the weirder parts. That's not bad writing, that's is great use of character flaws, and the story is stronger for it. I can't give more examples without breaking into spoiler territory, but the girls are the same way.

The game contains 5 main character stories (routes) and 3 special stories, with 14 different endings. World War II has a very special place in the hearts of Russians, and the 1940s are a fairly common setting in Russian fiction, video games included. Sadly, some of the other good Russian games weren't as lucky.

Even then, it takes a complete shift in setting, character, and even storytelling genre for Semyon and Miku to end up together. What Anime we have is the down the rabbit hole” approach to storytelling, enhanced by how the summer and the camp's light atmosphere contrasts Semyon's crestfallen demeanor and lifestyle in the real world”.

Game development started in May 2008 based off an image posted to the Russian IIchan imageboard. The reason for this is that the game is bigger than its routes and Semyon gets to find something he likes not in spite of, but because of the camp. Similarly, Sasha, the girl who plays the role of Slavya in the Miku route.

Made even more ludicrous by a disclaimer at the beginning claiming that all of the girls in the game are at least 18 years of age Except Ulyana of course, who is obviously younger than the others, but she doesn't have any sex scenes at all (although she does have a few spots of fanservice which are kind of disturbing when you think about it).

Frosty Kiss can be best summed up as an epilogue to Everlasting Summer, being a very short visual novel (I got the first ending in about ten minutes) which features the main female cast of the game (no cat girl or male characters make an appearance) and the protagonist of the previous game just celebrating in the new year.

Check out the download rank history for Everlasting Summer in United States. Steamspy's entry on SakuraGame showing the low average prices of their developed and published games. The in-game achievement said I got the Forever Alone” ending, while the Steam achievement said I got the Semyon Good Ending”.

Played through it the first 2 times without a guide and the used a guide to get all available endings and scenes afterwards. Now, as with much else in life, the focus shifted over into romancing the pretty girls, but it still carries a lot of those elements the whole way through.

There's a type-A girl, an angry girl, a nerdy boy and so on. But there seems to be some love put into the characters, and their speech patterns make them less bland. It just seems a bit amateurish to me. Not bad, I should stress, but I've seen more professional looking artwork in other visual novels and this problem lets Everlasting Summer down a bit.

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