Sad to hear you go, but very grateful for all you've contributed! Lots of love and support for your future work
rebyc
Recent community posts
Kota and Onsen aren't really brothers in a mortal/human sense. They're two beings created through the splitting of a river deity. There isn't really a, say, biological component to it. They're brothers in the sense they have the same progenitor. But they didn't share a womb or anything.
Lots of myth from virtually every culture works this way, or in even wilder ones. The nordic god Kvasir was born after a bunch of other gods chewed berries, spit into a cup, and mixed their spit together. Aphrodite spawned from the cut-off testicles of the titan Uranus, and that isn't even close to the strangest birth in Greek myth.
They're just... different. They aren't siblings in the same way we would be.
Hey folks. Haven't been around in a while, but I hope you're all doing well, or as well as you can be.
Truth be told, I've been thinking about MH a lot, though not specifically the game itself, its genre, nor its plot. Rather, I've been thinking about its concept and what it's meant to me. And I recognize on the outside it's silly for a rando to express something more heartfelt about funny-vn-game-with-sexy-furry-mans-and-memes. Heck, I made some of the shittier shitposts.
In any case, MH has always been a standout to me for its humanity, and a resolute expression of humanitarianism that is strangely rare within the medium. It's certainly rare in games in general. It's rare to find any imagined universe where indiscriminate sanctuary and the collective healing of trauma can be its core championed tenets.
And that's really why I can't stop thinking about MH. Without going into details, my life took a very dramatic foul turn a couple years ago. I'm still struggling to recover, all the while the state of the world seems absurdly dire and oppressive. And then there's this funny visual novel (for free) that celebrates compassion, charity and acceptance all the while sprinkling in deep-fried meme shitposts. It isn't saccharine. It shows horrifying abuse and a truly ugly side of humanity, but they don't punctuate the story. MH is about seeing the ugliness of injustice and reacting with humanitarian pursuit. It's about healing rather than hurting. I'm not a religious person, but Asterion mentioning his favourite Christian verses are the Beatitudes is just the perfect summary of what is at the heart of this story.
Again, it feels rare to find humanitarian messages of this calibre in a visual novel. It's rare to find it in life right now. And that's why it's so important to me, and, I hope, others.
This long ramble is really just a prelude to this message to MinoAnon, Nanoff, and any others who contributed to the game's development: Thank you for making Minotaur Hotel. Thank you for being who you are. It (still) means a whole lot to me.
And thank you for Robert, who is precious and whom I would do anything for.
Sincerely,
A fan.
The devs have said they currently have no intention of implementing NSFW scenes into the game, but it does discuss and even allude to NSFW situations. I take that to mean there will be no explicit scenes in the game, though themes of sexuality will be present.
They are also open to NSFW fanart and the like.
A version of Doom was released for the Super Nintendo. This project emulates pretty much precisely the limits of what the SNES was capable of rendering as pseudo-3d graphics.
I don't know what PSX games you've seen, but even the worst of its first generation of games looked substantially more advanced than this.
Having no way of knowing it was sanctioned also means having no way of knowing it wasn't. Which also isn't true, because, you know, you could've used this amazing secret technique known as "asking." It's a far better approach than being a cop.
I know you're trying to apologize, but it doesn't seem like you understand that jumping to accusations was the problem, not you simply being factually wrong.
And that's forgetting the fact that it's very obviously a fan game.
Just a friendly bit of advice: Don't speak authoritatively on historical matters you lack the intellectual courage to actually learn about.
Trans people are not some modern invention or whatever transphobic garbage you're suggesting here. Hiro's story seems to take place in pre-nazi Germany, which was in fact at the cutting edge of sexual research and queer rights advocacy from foundations such as the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft in Berlin (the very institute whose books were the first the Nazis gathered for book burnings, fyi)
Hiro's identity isn't forced, it fits well with the story's period AND he is precious and I would kill anyone who would try to harm him.
Don't wanna pick favourites because there isn't a single bad song in the soundtrack, but Personal Elegy with the Hinterlands as a backdrop works so well. There's something about its mix of electric guitars and steel pedals that makes a road trip through the south feel right.




