All told, these are some of the best production values I’ve seen in any adventure game, let alone a Kickstarter project. An infectious pop soundtrack from freelance composer Jonathan Wandag rounds out the package, imbuing scenes with a playful, happy mood. The voice actresses are mostly newcomers from the sound of things (which makes sense aside from Dan Green – the star of Yu-Gi-Oh – most voiceover professionals stay away from this stuff), but their line delivery is very smooth and natural – heck, even their fake enthusiasm sounds more convincing than most of the girls I’ve dated. Not only are they well-drawn, they’re also animated with multiple expressions and lip-syncing to the game’s fully-voiced dialogue. As for the dating sim elements, where most western takes on the anime style tend to be subtly off, HuniePop’s character portraits could give most Japanese eroge circles a run for their money. The game’s interface looks fantastic, and its puzzle visuals can easily stand toe-to-toe with the likes of Bejeweled, Tetris, and Puzzle League in terms of all-important clarity and simplicity. Designer Ryan Koons (an ex-Insomniac employee) brought on a team of supremely talented artists to help bring his filthy vision to life, and the results are plain to see. The first thing you’ll notice when you boot up the game is that it looks – and sounds – really, really good. Well, that’s not the only thing that sets it apart. What sets HuniePop apart is that all of this is accomplished through match-three puzzle gameplay – yes, even the sex. The goal of the game, such as there is one, is to seduce a multitude of women (the technical term is “waifus”) with diverse personalities and ethnic backgrounds so that they’ll send you increasingly racy pictures and eventually sleep with you. HuniePop is one of those “dating simulators” or “galge” (Gal-Games) that’s so popular in Japan, but let’s cut the weak euphemism – it’s convoluted pornography. Thanks for reading,please vote and comment if you want.This is a difficult review to write – not because HuniePop is hard to evaluate by any stretch, but because in writing this I have to admit that I played it. I bought the FGO 5th anniversary wall scroll and the guilty gear strive May hat. I wish I could have gone to the FGO 5th anniversary panel instead. Nothing new was shown here and it was again a bunch of trailers. Kinda understandable when they had 4 panels at AX. Nothing was new and there were just trailers of already released filmsĪniplex was a big let down. I went to the GKIDS panel and it was honestly quite boring. The one that had the most screaming for the character would send a message to kotobukiya that the fans would like a figure of that character. The transformers part was suggestions for the next figures. GSC and Aniplex did not have raffle prizes this year but kotobukiya stood up to the plate and gave away huge 1/7 scale figures as prizes and they had lots of new announcements. The art was really cool and I might pick up a shirt from the booth tomorrow. I took some photos of the radio Eva collection at the Animate booth.
![huniepop pictures imgur huniepop pictures imgur](https://64.media.tumblr.com/effb5df3af6207fce8da979df0d56843/63970e0e655dea9e-d1/s1280x1920/8d6313bb7f5c05541d4a2313dd9fbedff68da62d.jpg)
I am kinda sad that tomorrow is the last day. It seems that we are getting to thee end. Hello MFC, another day of Anime Expo is over.