

It’s very slice-of-life and mostly goes for ‘cute’ over everything else, but I enjoyed it well enough. With that said, it is more engaging than many of the fanservice-focused Vita titles I’ve played and I grew to like many of the characters (in spite of constantly finding them in compromising positions) who get fleshed-out back stories like Monica, the shopkeeper working overtime to pay off her debts or Lillian, the strange girl who constantly quotes the occult at you who has more to her than meets the eye.

Under the instructions of Irina, Fried and his team are deployed to various areas around the kingdom to ensure that the demon god stays banished from this land and along the way help the local people solve their problems.Īs you can deduce from the above, there is an effort to tell a coherent story here but it’s painfully generic and basically just an excuse to have the male lead with a group of female characters fighting under him. Along the way he’s assisted by a variety of (female) companions (so basically a harem) including chief of the library Irina, his childhood friend and now powerful knight Alisia, helpful spellcaster Melvy and unhinged battleaxe Grishina. See, Fried is a Libra who works in the Royal Library and has the power to seal away monsters in books, which comes increasingly in handy as more and more creatures seem to be lurking in various locations around Vitoria. Years later, a series of events threaten to break the seals that keep the demon god locked away and it’s up to Fried Einhard to ensure this catastrophe doesn’t come to pass. DeveloperĪfter a war between humans and the demon god which left the latter sealed away, the kingdom of Vitoria existed in peace.

Aquaplus and Sting deliver a by-the-numbers DRPG that focuses on heavy fanservice and tonnes of content, which has a few issues with basic missing features but manages to nail all the most important elements.
