First of all, the elephant in the room: the game really tries to have its cake and eat it too with the H-scenes, trying to convey sexual anxiety via psychological horror but also sometimes being clearly intended to be jack-off material. I do believe there are some stories that could only be told with sex and all its complexities, but Everyday took my willingness for good faith too far at times. Frankly, you have to have a pretty strong tolerance to all sorts of problematic BS in eroge to be able to appreciate the good, and I’m not saying that to diminish the opinions of those who don’t have that tolerance. I always roll my eyes at people who call this a “kamige” and gatekeep people who can’t appreciate the “genius” of this masterpiece when it’s for a very particular audience.

I wish more discussion was put on the resemblances to Cyrano de Bergerac. At its heart, Wonderful Everyday is a compelling twist on the classic story. That fear of saying what you mean, saying what you want in your own words, is relatable to me and while I had mostly learned my lesson by the time I played this game, I could still recognize how profound that component is for someone who is still afraid to express themselves. That’s what the real wonderful everyday is: being able to live true to one’s self with people who love you for you. Miss me with all the philosophy quotes and namedrops, I’m not a fan of philosophy just for pontification’s sake and instead appreciate how it manages to translate to the human condition in practice even while being draped in surreality and metaphor. It’s this surprisingly soft, tender side that I think of the most whenever I reflect on the game, a lone point on this thorny rose with which it can be held and admired.

I can see how this title would have caught eroge players by surprise with its very contemplative nature as it gradually broke down certain tropes of the medium until sex became one of the less remarkable (and prevalent) aspects in the later chapters. I would never recommend this to anybody who isn’t comfortable with eroge, as there are certainly better-told stories with fewer caveats to be found elsewhere, but I also can’t understate the power to pierce through its target audience’s defenses and maybe that’s why it’s so special to some people.

Reviewed on Apr 24, 2022


3 Comments


2 years ago

swagggg review. yea good point w/r/t to cyrano because the "mon panache!" is a refrain that appears throughout the all sections of the text (and its exegesis is situated within one of the lowkey best parts of the vn in the kimika/zakuro route). def could be read to be more important that the wittgenstein stuff. im in the camp that like loves the wittgenstein & philosophy stuff that shows up in End Sky II but the ultimate shakeout of all that shit is that reading (& by extension living) is about retaining authenticity like you've noticed. mon panache again & again!

also very fair to point how far the eroge gets pushed--sexual anxiety is def one way to look at and my intuitive read for some of it, but as time goes on since I last read it IDK if there's much there worth thinking about...eroge like bible black & you me and her probably deal with sex in a more legit & less noxious way lol. but dope shit as usual chief.

1 year ago

"I always roll my eyes at people who call this a “kamige” and gatekeep people who can’t appreciate the “genius” of this masterpiece when it’s for a very particular audience."

True for too many games and media in general tbh.
this review is probably the closest thing to my own opinion on this game that i've seen