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sayune

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A member registered 28 days ago

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Fish! These might be personal questions, so please feel free to ignore if you’d rather not answer:

What inspired you to create Lustful Sin?

Did you originally plan to focus on the adult content, and if so, what drove you to put so much heart and effort into the writing?

Do you have a background in writing or screenwriting? If not, how did you develop your mature and complex storytelling?

Would you prefer the game to be known more for its adult content or for its deep story and characters?

Thank you so much for your incredible work!


This might be an unpopular opinion, but I honestly like that you didn’t add music

In other games, it often feels like your experience is being hijacked because you're being told what to feel:

Happy scene = happy music
Sad scene = sad music
Funny scene = funny music

But with silence, you made what happens feel ambiguous and complex. You allow the audience to form their own experience, which is pretty cool

I wish I was joking😭

Thank you for the invite, but I'm pretty shy haha. It's tempting because you have no idea how much more I have to say

Thank you for the update!


I started playing this because I was horny and didn’t expect much, but holy shit, the writing is insane.

The girls have their own lives, goals, and inner conflicts—I actually found myself turning down sex scenes because I’d grown to respect the characters so much. The quiet detail of Hana not raising her hand for coffee (because of an offhand comment ages ago), or Rin not being a one-dimensional "tomboy" character by aspiring to be a nutritionist because of her friend that was implied to have... wow.

I expected the usual cliché where everyone’s existence revolves around the MC and they throw themselves at him, but the author wrote something far more sophisticated: it follows the lives of people who found themselves caught up in the supernatural, with everything they value at stake. They're forced to confront their flaws—Ai's kindness that saved the MC at the start later put everyone at risk by wanting to be "haunted" just so she could help out.

I cannot emphasize how beautiful the writing is. There's no affection meter or “do her quests to unlock sex” structure—doing them feels natural because they're required to progress the story. For example, the world is colored by showing the nuance of what a "ghost" means, that it's not a simple good vs evil story, and that was just from some random quest about a pen from one of the girls. You turned what could have been mindless fanservice into something thoughtful and deeply human.

Thank you so much for this masterpiece.