


Though the actions where you improve your character over the course of the school-year and react to random events revolving your schoolmates makes the game somewhat reminiscent of a Japanese dating sim, Academagia is a far broader game that does not focus as much on your character's relationships.Ī new player is likely to get a bit of an information shock when first playing, as the sheer number of skills and attributes can be overwhelming. The game is about performing actions that improve your skills, attributes, and friendships, reacting to random events and finally going on adventures, which provide the main bulk of the story, and are determined by your choices and your skills and attributes. You people are the reason that Steam early access is the joke that it is.Academagia is a game where you play a new student at the Academy of Magic. People could give ya'll garbage and you'd gobble it up and ask for seconds. The amount of people willing to act as unpaid company shills and defend even the most indefensible practices is frankly sickening. Your ability to critically think is faulty. Academagia Year 1 has no proper ending, simply a lead-in to Year 2. It is clearly not a standalone game considering that a stand-alone game has an ending. It's more akin to a Telltale game that releases episodically. Year 1 is the first part of a promised 5 part series. Yes they link together, but that doesn't mean when you buy Mass Effect 1 you are buying 1/3rd of a game.

Year 1 is as complete a game as each individual Mass Effect game is. We know that your standards are that low. In 7 years you'll still only have the wheel but I'll allow you to buy the same wheel again through a dealership.
#Academagia the making of mages socks and underwear full#
Hey you want to buy a car off me? You give me the full $30,000 now and I'll give you a wheel. Good to know the developers have the right priorities. Year 1 on Steam before Year 2 = good idea, from a business point of view. If they launched Year 2 on Steam before Year 1, and nobody knew what it was or bought it, then they released Year 1, they'd make considerably less money overall, which would hurt the development of Year 3. The better the Year 2 launch does, the sooner we're likely to get Year 3. This is a good thing, and an important thing. Having Year 1 already on Steam when Year 2 comes out should hopefully mean more sales of Year 2. It gives them more money to work on Year 2 and, more importantly (I'm guessing), exposure about the series. Having Year 1 on Steam before Year 2 makes sense. Given this, when they first decided to bring Year 1 to Steam, they were much less advanced with Year 2. They went through Greenlight and all that. It's not like they just decided to do this yesterday. I don't know how close they are to finishing Year 2, but they've been planning on getting Year 1 here for a long time now. They plan to bring Year 2 to Steam as well, and it makes sense to get Year 1 here first. I don't know about you but FAITH RESTORED /s. Whether one cares about it being on Steam or not is irrelevant what's relevant is that now that Year 1 -is- on Steam, they can focus on Year 2.ĭo it's not irrelevant because the developers decided getting a game that is still 1/5th finished after 7 years on STEAM is a priority. Devs have said repeatedly that getting it on Steam was a priority and that we were unlikely to get any solid news about Year 2 before Year 1 released on Steam.
