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(+4)

Fantastic game, love it, have "finished" it multiple times, tons of replay value. 100% willing to pay for The Headmaster, in the future when it becomes fully released. As a reviewer, the only thing that I'd have to add is that I have seen some grammar mistakes and English mistakes. (As in the language, not the country.) I am invested in this game, and will definitely send support on Patreon. I look forward to seeing this game grow, and I'm proud to be a part of the community.
If read-overs and edits are okay to submit, I'd love helping cutting workload down. Other than a grammar errors, this game is fantastic. Nothing to ruin a normal person's gameplay. As a reviewer, I do have to include that, but would not ruin game experience. Very minor changes. 9.9/10

(1 edit)

Agreed. An additional language issue: Rachel is both jealous and envious, but the game often mixes up the two. Envy is wanting something others have (she wants other girls' breasts/bodies). Jealousy is concern over losing something you have, to others (she is jealous when other girls get attention from the headmaster when she feels that attention should only be hers).

(+1)

Very true. As a reviewer, I didn't notice that, but now that you mention it, I went back and saw what you were talking about. It won't change my rating though, game is extremely well made. 

@Temujin_Senpai
wanting something that others have isn't envy, that is covetousness.

Envy has always an outward focus; we desire some item, person, or attribute possessed by someone else, and we are discontent or resentful about not having it. And often the person who is envious, hurt the target of their envy.

Jealousy on the otherhand has an inward focus, for example; the protection of one’s own items or relationships, especially romantic relationships. You can envy someone else for his girlfriend, but someone flirting with your own girlfriend makes you jealous, not envious.

The difference between envy and jealousy is that, in certain circumstances, jealousy can be a positive thing. Envy is never presented as positive. The type of jealousy defined as “zealous vigilance” is the unhappy or angry feeling caused when what rightfully belongs to us is being threatened.

Covetousness would be the desire, the want, but envy would be the intense emotions that could accompany such a desire.

As to your middle 2 paragraphs, you've not contradicted what I said. Envy is (the intense emotions that can accompany) wanting what others have (outward focused, as you say) and jealousy is the (intense emotions that can accompany) concern that others will take what you have (inward focused, as you say).

(+1)

It wasn't my intention to contradict, more to elaborate further ;)

Ah. Sorry I misunderstood what you were saying then.

Fortunately for all, neither Rachel nor any of the other girls suffered a Jesuit education.