If people read the links Benoit has posted, they'll learn the origins of these bishoujo games from a native Japanese. I thought I'd post my own take on this as well, seeing as Benoit used one of my posts from a different "games vs. ero-games" discussion. It might be a bit on the long side as verbosity is a slight problem of mine

<p>Hello, I'm a 25 year old Norwegian male, who's been playing video/computer games in some form or other for 20 years now. I play games from about every genre (except maybe sports and flight sims). This includes bishoujo games, both regular and the infamous "hentai" ero-games. I've played and own many of the ero-games released in English, and a handful of Japanese (untranslated) ones as well.<p>I'm not quite sure why ero-games always spark such heated debates. I would probably contribute it to the fact that people often generalise what bishoujo games are about, and often speak based on things they've heard from others rather than trying to look into the subject on their own and form an opinion based on what they experience. Sure, you can get a lot of truth from what others tell you, but it will often be biased, simplified and very one-sided. I could probably write a full novel just about what I have personally experienced, but I'll try to keep it a little shorter than that

<p>My first experience with ero-games was in the late 90's or early 2000, I believe. I had found a foreign website offering "hentai games", or "Juegos hentai", and not understanding what they were, I downloaded a game called
<b>Immoral Study</b> (which was in English) and decided to play it. Well, I was in for a surprise... Basically, you play a private tutor with a reputation for helping students improve their grades immensely. This tutor has an ulterior motive though, which is getting his young female students to bed (always consensual, though a bit... roundabout). It took a few tries before I got to that point without being found out by the old maid/chaperone in the house, but the resulting scenes were a new experience in gaming for me, to say the least. It took maybe 30 minutes to play through it from beginning to end (not counting the various game-overs I got), but for a guy coming from the mainstream games where even hints of nudity were unheard of and swearwords censored (when they appeared at all), this was truly something new. Games and porn combined in one! How lucky could you get!? :p %)<p>I tried loads of the English games on that website in the months after that. Some were good (by the standards I had then), a few were great, the rest were... frankly, disturbing and/or disgusting as hell. One of the great games for that time was
<b>True Love 95</b>, a high-school romance simulation game, complete with stat-building, chicks, love, intrigues and sex. Great stuff. Another was
<b>Seasons of the Sakura</b>, another high-school romance game with a more linear gameplay, but more "storytelling", and less sex (only once per playthrough). Very romantic, and it could surely have been released without the adult scenes and still be good, though I prefer them to be there. A third title was
<b>Divi-Dead</b>. This was a story which seemed like it was inspired by a Lovecraft novel, a great occult thriller with some really freaky (non-sexual and sexual) incidents. The plot was deep but also a bit hard to grasp completely.<p>What I liked the most about these games (and still do) was the fact that they didn't try to pretend that sex didn't exist in this world. Sex is far more natural than killing in the modern world we live in, yet nearly every type of media try to pretend like violence is the most natural thing in the world, and sex is something you don't talk about. It's completely wacked that games advocating love (with consequent sex) are a hidden niche, while advocating murder, hate and violence is fully accepted (ok, there are vocal groups that don't accept violence in media either, but those aren't the ones usually playing them). And if you can accept extreme violence in "normal" games, what's so sick about games with violent sex? I don't like games with rape, but I can't accept hypocricy claiming that violence is okay as long as the media it's in doesn't include sex as well.<p>I've been toying with the thought of atoning for my "sins" of murder by finishing the storyline and sex scene for one ero-game girl per person I've killed in violent games (make love, not war and all that). Last session with Master of Orion I killed a couple of billion colonists, so I'll probably be playing ero-games until I'm 2714 years old. Hopefully Virtual Reality technology has come so far by the time I'm 100 that the experience is near impossible to disinguish from real life :p <p>Continued next message, guess I got too verbose (I warned you!

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