"Mr. Right Now" an erotic interactive story game that follows the life of a female student navigating the challenges of college life, self-discovery, and sexual exploration. The story game blends elements of drama, romance, and comedy.
Sherri is a college student struggling in her classes, unsure of her major, and having trouble finding love. With the help of her gay roommate, Sherri meets three potential love interests: Lucas, a fit and rugged jock; a goth girl from her Shakespeare class; and Professor Warren, a former teacher with a captivating intellect.
The game takes place in various locations around the college campus, including classrooms, lecture halls, the women's restroom, and the main character's dorm room.
Choices made by the reader drive the narrative with character development customized via interactive dialogue and interactions. The game features a dynamic scoring system that tracks the player's relationship progress with the other main characters they meet. The scoring system influences which characters end up in sex scenes together.
"Mr. Right Now" caters to a range of kinks, from casual sex to potential dominance and submission dynamics. The story also explores themes of bi-curiosity and same-sex relationships.
This story game aims to give players a chance to experience (or re-experience) the ups and downs of college life, the thrill of new relationships, and the excitement of coming of age and first time sexual exploration.
Please let me know if you'd like to see any parts of the plot expanded, any suggestions, or requests for sequels.
Comments
All CommentsI like the interactive idea but all other commenters are right this one isn't very well done at all there's choice but no real choice ..
It is just too rough, dialogue doesn’t see natural.
The concept of an interactive story is definitely interesting and intriguing enough to take a look. I had to stop at the 2nd interaction because the effort was so thin. The dialogue was as cliche as can be imagined in 30 seconds. At which time I HAD to stop reading. I humbly suggest if the author makes an effort to actually create legitimate original conversational interactions he could be onto something. 2 stars
Reductive and insulting language about LGBT people, tedious insignificant decisions, lack of descriptions or incentive. These things are bad enough, but I have gone through this story multiple times, writing down the options I chose, and the Professor story line goes no where every time. The final line mocks me, saying it’s a disappointment. Don’t waste your time with this.
How do you get professor Warren's route? He keeps turning me down. ;_;