The reviewer goes on to explain the concept of “ecchi” and how the game is trying to get away with providing players service without showing the act of sex itself – and much like other similar hatchet-jobs, claimed that the Switch is meant to be a family friendly console (despite having games like Doom, Bayonetta, Wolfenstein II and Outlast): It’s presented as love story, with your reflexology sessions supposedly designed to help Asuke ‘find herself’. For all intents and purposes, it’s a ‘romantic massage simulator’, where you meet Asuke – one of the main heroines from the wider series – and run your virtual hands across your body. “All pretences of making this anything other than an excuse to ogle overdeveloped schoolgirls have departed, and what you’re left with is Senran Kagura Reflexions. Immediately at the start of his “review”, the critics finds the game’s sex appeal and overdeveloped schoolgirls problematic: Yet another video game “critic” has delivered a superb endorsement of “cheap sleaze” title Senran Kagura: Reflexions, unsurprisingly taking offense to the game’s surplus of sex appeal and demonstrating the extent of his journalistic capabilities with his constant misspelling of Asuka’s name and other basic words.
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