![french eroges french eroges](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41nEoa2rwwL.jpg)
Running back to Lizza's grandmother's cave (fighting zombies along the way), he learns that Lizza has the emblem tattooed on her thigh (picture follows). Mary says that to enter the fortress, Mash will need an emblem and suggests he talk again to Lizza. They mostly happen without comment, or with bland comment.Īt this point, it's not clear what Mash has to do to enter Gidd's fortress (the guards repel him if he nears), so it's one of the moments of the game where he has to run back and forth to various NPCs to figure it out. He doesn't make jokes or cringy statements about his experiences. Finally, unlike the heroes of other eroges that we've seen, Mash is not depicted as either particularly suave or particularly inept. Many of them suggest that Mash is "participating" in the activities depicted, except that he himself never actually appears. The other weird thing is that many of the images. As usual, many of the girls look underaged to me, but I'll just accept that's a cultural/artistic thing.
![french eroges french eroges](https://erogedownload.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/euphoria.jpg)
None of Mash's encounters are non-consensual, though like Xentar, he is sometimes rewarded with sex (or just images of unclothed girls) in situations where the girls in question have just been through traumatic experiences. The sin of all of these games, I guess, is that they didn't have breasts.Įach one of Mash's erotic encounters shows three or four pictures of the girl in question, censored in the places that Japanese media typically censors images of girls.
#French eroges series
There's a Japanese-only fourth entry in the Phantasie series from 1990. A bunch of other games I know only from intriguing titles: The Magic of Scheherazade (1987), The Return of Ishtar (1987), Zombie Hunter (1987), Bastard (1988), Druid (1988), Slime Master (1989), Another Genesis (1990). There's the delightfully weird-looking Panorama Toh (1983). There's Riglas (1986), an adventure-RPG hybrid with a "studio" perspective that looks like it could have been influenced by Quest for Glory if Riglas hadn't come out first. Paladin (1985) is a fun-looking RPG-platformer hybrid. Was SSI influenced by this Japanese game? I'll never know because I can't play it.
#French eroges Pc
I desperately want to find the people involved and ask, why Mad Paradox? Why not any of the host of 1980s and early 1990s Japanese PC RPGs that look so much more interesting? There's Fantasian (1985), which coupled first-person dungeon exploration with top-down grid-based tactical combat before Pool of Radiance did it in the U.S. By all appearances, the company seems to have existed solely to bring Mad Paradox to an American market. I don't know where they were located or who was on the staff. The title screen of the game itself is the only evidence. Nearly 30 years later, I can't even find any evidence that a company called Samourai existed.