I finished Chaos Child, wait sorry, need to use the proper Engrish spelling: Chäos;Child
I can't help but compare this title to its spritual (and kinda literal) prequel, Chaos;Head. We have a protagonist, Takuru, who is still a pretty obnoxious nerd, except this time he actually believes he is somehow so much smarter than everyone else. While on paper he should be more annoying, what elevates him miles and miles above Takumi from Chaos;Head, is the fact that Takuru actually feels like a real person. He (not so secretly) wants to be more popular with girls and (to his deserved shame) reads up on pick-up artist magazines. He doesn't spend every waking hour of his free time locked in his shitty one-room apartment. He has motivations and ambitions that are easy to understand and due to his inherent helplessness (very ineffectively masked by his ego), you can't help but root for him.
Now maybe it's just that Chaos;Head lowered my standards so much, but this game felt so much fucking better than its namesake prequel. The plot revolves again around a bunch of crazy murders, but this time the game spends enough time to put the actual mystery front and center, with our heroes doing everything they to solve it. The story also takes a much darker turn this time, with real stakes, that don't simply get (all) undone in the final path. I was especially fond of the bittersweet ending, where Takuru and Serika decide to go their different ways for the forseeable rest of their lives, and Takuru going to jail for murders he did not commit, though was ultimately responsible for (can't even go into that one in a spoiler, just go play the game!)
I know some people recommend playing CHaos;HEad before going into Chaos;Child, but I can't agree, not after having finished Chaos;Head. It's a bad game. Just read a plot summary somewhere and you will be fine. As for Chaos;Child, this game I can heartily recommend to any fan of Visual Novels. It's a perfect standalone entry to the "science adventure" series, which it shares with other great titles such as Steins;Gate and Robotics;Notes. In the overall order, I would say it's not quite as amazing as Steins;Gate, but a lot more enjoyable than Robotics;Notes (even if it's a bit darker, whereas Robotics;Notes felt much more saccharine overall.)
I can't help but compare this title to its spritual (and kinda literal) prequel, Chaos;Head. We have a protagonist, Takuru, who is still a pretty obnoxious nerd, except this time he actually believes he is somehow so much smarter than everyone else. While on paper he should be more annoying, what elevates him miles and miles above Takumi from Chaos;Head, is the fact that Takuru actually feels like a real person. He (not so secretly) wants to be more popular with girls and (to his deserved shame) reads up on pick-up artist magazines. He doesn't spend every waking hour of his free time locked in his shitty one-room apartment. He has motivations and ambitions that are easy to understand and due to his inherent helplessness (very ineffectively masked by his ego), you can't help but root for him.
Now maybe it's just that Chaos;Head lowered my standards so much, but this game felt so much fucking better than its namesake prequel. The plot revolves again around a bunch of crazy murders, but this time the game spends enough time to put the actual mystery front and center, with our heroes doing everything they to solve it. The story also takes a much darker turn this time, with real stakes, that don't simply get (all) undone in the final path. I was especially fond of the bittersweet ending, where Takuru and Serika decide to go their different ways for the forseeable rest of their lives, and Takuru going to jail for murders he did not commit, though was ultimately responsible for (can't even go into that one in a spoiler, just go play the game!)
I know some people recommend playing CHaos;HEad before going into Chaos;Child, but I can't agree, not after having finished Chaos;Head. It's a bad game. Just read a plot summary somewhere and you will be fine. As for Chaos;Child, this game I can heartily recommend to any fan of Visual Novels. It's a perfect standalone entry to the "science adventure" series, which it shares with other great titles such as Steins;Gate and Robotics;Notes. In the overall order, I would say it's not quite as amazing as Steins;Gate, but a lot more enjoyable than Robotics;Notes (even if it's a bit darker, whereas Robotics;Notes felt much more saccharine overall.)
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