Looking for this?*Insertstringofannoyedexpletiveshere*

Thanks for the work & share! I guess it's time I finally try out these mods.
Still having fantasies about a "real sex-battle, no pathetic MC" mod.
Looking for this?*Insertstringofannoyedexpletiveshere*
That kinda loses its point since when you finish you end up in the Frozen Basement where you can get sex with whoever you want, whenever you want...This game is a masterpiece of its genre. It also has an intelligent philosophical aspect. The protagonist is constantly getting killed and then coming back as another character. There are karmic forces driving the reincarnation. The original protagonist is seeking to avenge his childhood girlfriend who was turned into a succubus. The succubae will continue to attack men until they are satisfied by one. So, the ultimate objective of the game is to achieve a sort of nirvana. If you don't achieve that, you are going to be playing this game forever. So, do you want to rest in peace, or have sex and get killed by succubae until the end of time? I have played the game a lot, but I don't want to play it until the end of time.
So, it raises questions regarding immortality. How reincarnation works. When you look into the abyss and it looks back at you, what does that mean?
You clearly misundertand quite a lotWhen you look into the abyss and it looks back at you, what does that mean?
I had a cat. It was a ruddy Abyssinian; thus, it purred, but— only at times!Nietzsche. He was a nihilist. So, he didn't ...
SMH, no he was not talking about filling the abyss in that quote.
OK. I read the rules. Are you saying my comment is off topic? I was discussing a quote from the game, one which you also saw fit to comment on. He was talking about finding meaning for your life in a universe that doesn't appear to have meaning. That's my take on it. Others have a different take on it. Based on the letter on the table, I think the developer just saw it as a fit meme.SMH, no he was not talking about filling the abyss in that quote.
Mods work with the official English version, but for some of the newer mods, you will need to make sure you're updated to version 1.3.1. The update is posted here, with some English-translated mods available here, here, and here, as well. You can also find all these on the SQDT Discord, which will be a little more straightforward to install (due to file size limitations, a few of the posts here require you to download the Japanese mod first and then overwrite the English mod).So, haven't been here or played in a while (life stuff) but saw that the EN ver. is out and immediately got it.
But now I miss the mods. Do the mods work on the EN ver? and if so, are they translated as well or or they still in JP?
Mods work with the official English version, but for some of the newer mods, you will need to make sure you're updated to version 1.3.1. The update is posted here, with some English-translated mods available here, here, and here, as well. You can also find all these on the SQDT Discord, which will be a little more straightforward to install (due to file size limitations, a few of the posts here require you to download the Japanese mod first and then overwrite the English mod).
Uh, that is my signature; it's attached to every post I make and is not directed at you. So for clarification: You have done nothing to break the rules and I am not commenting as a moderator in this particular exchange.
Unfortunately your take ignores the context of the quote, in fact you're using an incomplete quote as Strange has pointed out while providing the full quotation and furthermore, assumes a causality you can't substantiate. Worse yet, both Nietzsche and the translator would have to be ignorant of the meaning behind the words they were using in order for the quote to mean anything close to what you're saying.
As I mentioned, in the context of the game, it is probably just being used as a fitting meme. As Strange himself mentioned, the quote has been given various interpretations, mine being one of them. Also, I think a reader is entitled to his own subjective interpretation, even if it is one the writer never intended, if it is meaningful to him. Anyway, games occasionally venture into some pretty heavy philosophical topics. Monster Girl Quest gets into Quantum Paradoxes and the debate between Free Will and Determinism. But, the developer would probably be a little puzzled by how much we are making of this.Uh, that is my signature; it's attached to every post I make and is not directed at you. So for clarification: You have done nothing to break the rules and I am not commenting as a moderator in this particular exchange.
Unfortunately your take ignores the context of the quote, in fact you're using an incomplete quote as Strange has pointed out while providing the full quotation and furthermore, assumes a causality you can't substantiate. Worse yet, both Nietzsche and the translator would have to be ignorant of the meaning behind the words they were using in order for the quote to mean anything close to what you're saying.
OK. Nietzsche said he who fights with monsters should look to it that he does not become a monster. When you gaze into the abyss, it gazes back and tells you what you are made of. The theme of the game is consistent with that idea, since the protagonist is obsessed with fighting with succubae and the grudge or bad karma is constantly being passed on, and it not being resolved. So, I was wrong. It is not just a clever meme or about finding meaning in a meaningless universe. That increases my admiration for the game.As I mentioned, in the context of the game, it is probably just being used as a fitting meme. As Strange himself mentioned, the quote has been given various interpretations, mine being one of them. Also, I think a reader is entitled to his own subjective interpretation, even if it is one the writer never intended, if it is meaningful to him. Anyway, games occasionally venture into some pretty heavy philosophical topics. Monster Girl Quest gets into Quantum Paradoxes and the debate between Free Will and Determinism. But, the developer would probably be a little puzzled by how much we are making of this.
OK. Nietzsche said he who fights with monsters should look to it that he does not become a monster. When you gaze into the abyss, it gazes back and tells you what you are made of. The theme of the game is consistent with that idea, since the protagonist is obsessed with fighting with succubae and the grudge or bad karma is constantly being passed on, and it not being resolved. So, I was wrong. It is not just a clever meme or about finding meaning in a meaningless universe. That increases my admiration for the game.
Sound correctThe theme of the game is consistent with that idea, since the protagonist is obsessed with fighting with succubae and the grudge or bad karma is constantly being passed on, and it not being resolved.
I'm still planning on doing a translation. Last I spoke with SQDT, they were still planning to use it. There's no present ETA on a translation, though; it won't be, like, a simultaneous release. But I'll likely begin on it when I'm able.Any plan to translate their upcoming gaiden game?