Yuri Game Jam 2024 Review

December 25th, 2024

Logo for the itch.io Yuri Game Jam 2024, featuring a brown-skinned angel with orange pony tails, black wings on her back and off the front of her head, wearing a pink crop top that reads "girl kisser" and an unzipped orange jacket.By Patricia Baxter, Guest Reviewer

With a whopping 110 entries, from full games to demos, the 2024 Yuri Game Jam was a smashing success both for the developers who participated and fans of the genre looking for new video games to play. With so many intriguing games to choose from, it can be overwhelming to know what kinds of games are available and what to expect from each title.

While I have admittedly only scratched the surface of the types of games on this massive list, the games I have already played were extremely impressive, whether it is for their unique approaches to the yuri genre, clever writing, distinctive art style, creative game design, or some combination therein. Here are six games, five full games and one demo, that caught my eye from this year’s Yuri Game Jam.

 

A Witch is Getting Married by FeatherBoy

Content Warnings: Depictions of anxiety and complicated relationships

Available for: The three major PC operating systems

A Witch is Getting Married follows the life of a witch named Thyme, who finds herself gradually drifting apart from her best friend, Safflower, who she may or may not have a crush on, after said friend gets a new boyfriend. With gorgeous visuals and grounded dialogue, this game covers the topic of losing connections with the people you love with a great deal of care, while not glossing over the ugly emotions and anxieties that come with it.

Art: 10
Story: 9
Characters: 9
Service: 1 (optional flirtatious dialogue during dream sequences)
Yuri: 3 – 6 (players can choose to depict Thyme’s feeling for Safflower as romantic or platonic) 

Overall: 9

 

Bridgewater Deeproot Access Radio (Demo) by Runa Liore

Content Warnings: Disturbing/scary stories from the callers, one caller being a massive creep (misogyny, stalking, trespassing)
Available for: The three major PC operating systems

A new demo from the developer of 77 Oleander Avenue Ghost House Investigation, which I reviewed for Okazu last year, Bridgewater Deeproot Access Radio follows Reb Wychwood the co-host of a paranormal radio show, where she sits opposite of her sceptical co-host, Zinnia Braxton, as they take in listener’s calls and unsubtly flirt with each other. Each story presented in the demo is given a great deal of polish in terms of their visuals and sound design, which makes me excited to see what we will experience in the full game, scheduled for release next year.

Art: 10 (various art styles used for each story in the anthology)
Story: 10
Characters: 10 (realistic personalities, for better and for worse)
Service: 1 (some flirting)
Yuri: 7 (Reb is more than fond of Zinnia, but we only see hints that it’s reciprocated in the demo) 

Overall: 10

 

Come Towards Me by snixiy

Content Warnings: Non-explicit nudity & sensuality, description of missing body parts from past injuries, past character death
Available for: The three major PC operating systems

It’s a common tale: a woman wanders into the woods at night despite the repeated warnings from her community, compelled by an unseen force. But even familiar stories can feel fresh and rejuvenated, when designed with such love and care as Come Towards Me. The developer’s creative approach to graphic design, and ability to build up a foreboding atmosphere, have deeply impressed me, and it makes me curious to see what they will make next.

Art: 6 for imagery (number of images in the game can be counted on one hand, and they are intentionally obscured), 8 for font and overall graphic design
Story: 7.5
Characters: 7
Service: 6 (gets very close to sexually explicit near the end)
Yuri: 9

Overall: 7.5

 

Mechanical Relations by gaybreast

Content Warnings: Explicit sexual content, minigames that simulate sexual foreplay, temporary loss of a limb for a robot character, flashing images, shaking images
Available for: The three major PC operating systems, also playable on web browsers

This game is meant for adult players aged 18 and older. Mechanical Relations is a completely different game from the rest of the titles on this list, being an adventure game built in RPG Maker, rather than a visual novel. Marmalade and Fritter are two girlfriends who find themselves stranded on a moon after a delivery goes wrong. Thankfully they are safe and are able to “unwind” together. A game that is both cute and sexy, this is recommended for players looking for gay robot sex featuring endearing characters.

Art: 10
Story: 6 (admittedly not a lot of plot)
Characters: 10
Service: 10
Yuri: 10 

Overall: 10

 

The end of an obsession by ebi-hime

Content Warnings: Blood, stabbing, murder, kidnapping, toxic co-dependency, manipulation, gaslighting
Available for: The three major PC operating systems and Android

The most intense game on the list, The end of an obsession is a grim fairytale for those who enjoy twists and discussions about the nature of stories. That being said, the major caveat with this game is that in order to fully appreciate and understand it you need to play the developer’s previous title, It gets so lonely here, first, but both games are more than worth the experience thanks to their excellent writing, visuals, and sound design.

Art: 10
Story: 10
Characters: 7
Service: 1 (any physical activity between the leads feels squeamish and coercive, which is intentional)
Yuri: 4 (YMMV depending on how you perceive their dynamic by the end of the game) 

Overall: 8.5

 

To Constrict And To Suffocate by peridon

Content Warnings: Obsessive behaviour, background character death and suicide
Available for: Windows and Linux, also playable on web browsers

Maca, a jellyfish-like sea creature, has always been curious about humans and life above the surface. One day, she takes a chance to speak with Lyra, a seemingly disinterested human, and the two soon form a connection. But is this bond healthy for them, and will they be able to bridge the gap between their definitions of love? A well written, and unexpectedly sweet, visual novel about how our connections impact us, for better or for worse.

Art: 8
Story: 9
Characters: 10 (flawed and complicated)
Service: 0
Yuri: 10 

Overall: 9



The Vexations of a Shut-In Vampire Princess, Volume 8

December 23rd, 2024

Cover for The Vexations of a Shut-In Vampire Princess, Volume 8 Light novel: A busty maid in a short shirt lays back in the lap of a young-looking blonde girl in red “military”-style uniform, also with a short skirt. They look at us, the maid salaciously, the blonde girl with anger, her mouth open in exclamation. Autumn 2023 we watched an anime called The Vexations of a Shut-In Vampire Princess. I found it to be tolerable with some fun elements , Guest Reviewer Cryssoberyl found more to like about it than I. Thanks to Yen Press I have the chance to pick up the light novel series upon which the anime is based and I wondered if it was more to my taste than the anime.

To make sure I was well past the end of the anime, I am beginning with The Vexations of a Shut-In Vampire Princess, Volume 8 on the assumption that it wouldn’t be that hard to follow any plot in the series. I was both right and wrong in that regard.

The story here begins well past the end of the anime, and at least one more major arc into the series. As a result, there are a number of new characters I had to familiarize myself with. The story is, as I assumed simple, not fully formed and superficially written – it still feels like it’s made for an episodic anime, rather than a novel, per se. Almost none of the characters are given inferiority except Terakomari – and her thoughts are largely centered around being disgusted by her perverted maid and then painfully jealous of her, as one of the new characters presents Komari with a rival.

Dark Cores have been stolen from her world, so Komari and her group are in the Netherworld and very at risk of actually dying, as opposed to the temporary state of non-existence they are used to. They are also being stalked by alternate versions of the military and governments from their world, and yet another nefarious organization, Star something. Please forgive my lapse, like three or four new nefarious organizations are introduced in this one volume, between baths, battles and blood-sucking and a fair amount of screaming, so I forget whether it is the Star somethings or the Moon somethings that we need to be worried about or both, as we head to this world’s version of the Mulnite Empire to meet up with this world’s version of Komari’s mother.

While they travel, and battle and blood suck and bathe, new character Collette freaks out when she meets Villhaze because she had a best friend named Villhaze who disappeared! Our Villhaze can’t possible be that Villhaze, surely, even though she has no memories of her childhood. Yeah, no, she’s the same Villhaze. The louder the protestations became the more obvious it was, until, in a climactic battle, in which it is Komari who becomes practically god-like to defeat the Biwa-playing baddie, all of Villhaze’s memories come rushing back. Nonetheless, she breaks Colette’s heart and declares her intent to stay with her Mistress.

And the “Komari Club” move on towards their destination.

Like the anime, this light novel has some good moments – mostly when the characters stop talking and just do anything. The talking is very expository and often absurd. The constant leitmotif of perversity from Villhaze is exhausting and even more so when Terakomari begins to question her own appeal as Villhaze’s attention turns to Colette, and suddenly we are reminded that there truly are people who think someone creeping can somehow be interpreted as a compliment (usually those people are the creepers). Those people are wrong and this book would have been much better without it. But, this is how we know the series is not written for adult women.

My absolute favorite moment was when the narration became scandalized at Colette putting mayonnaise on her curry in the Curryd empire. The scene includes a line directed at Villhaze which actually made me chuckle, “Do you realize you could start a war by putting sauce on someone’s dish without permission?” I have been that person and have fought that war, so I am with Terakomari on this one. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – 6  Not terrible
Story  – 5 They camped, ate curry, fought a battle in nearly 200 pages.
Characters  – I would gladly follow Esther and Nelia and dump the rest
Service – 5 It’s like a low drone of omnipresent background radiation
Yuri – 7 Colette after Villhaze who is after Komari.

Overall – 6 Not the worst thing I have ever read or reviewed. ^_^

Many thanks to Yen Press for providing me with a review copy. If this series strikes you as fun and enchanting, this was a very good volume, with Komari really stepping up at the end to be the leader her armies imagine her to be.



Qualia the Purple: The Complete Manga Collection

December 22nd, 2024

Manga cover for Qualia The Purple. The Complete Manga Collection. On a cover of purple stripes, a girl with long brown hair and big purple eyes looks up at us, her shadow spreading behind her.by Matt Marcus, Staff Writer

Qualia the Purple: The Complete Manga Collection is a story about a high school girl named Yukari, who sees all people as robots.

Ok, that’s not entirely true. This is a story about Manabu (aka Gaku-chan), a normal high school girl who is in love with Yukari but doesn’t quite realize it.

…Alright, you got me. This is a story not really about either of those things. This is a story about quantum mechanics and theoretical physics that happens to center on Manabu’s metaphysical attempts to save Yukari from an early death at the hands of an evil science institute.

Based on the light novel of the same name, this single-volume collection is just as confused as the intro of this review. It begins with a strong concept: Yukari appears to be a chuunibyou, but in reality she has the ability to deconstruct and rebuild matter however she seems fit. Manabu is a normal girl with something of a princely streak. You think you’re in for some sci-fi-tinged high school Yuri yearning, but somehow it develops into a plot about a serial killer.

And then, roughly a third into its length, it decides to pivot into a multiverse story that damsels Yukari, the girl who is practically Dr. Manhattan, in order to put the story in Manabu’s hands (Manabu even addresses this bait-and-switch directly to the reader). By design, she is an empty vessel with a singular goal. 

The story already made a leap into the unpleasant with the serial killer subplot, but the back two-thirds ends up making Manabu out to be a monster as she tries everything, no matter how unpleasant, to achieve her goal. Most unfortunate of these decisions involves Alice, a child prodigy who arrives at the high school to recruit Yukari to the aforementioned evil science institute. A major pivot point involves an alternate universe Manabu falling in love with her, despite her being younger by a fair number of years. Our point-of-view Manabu ends up developing a relationship with Alice as a means to further her goal of saving Yukari. The whole thing feels like an unforced error, since there is nothing about Alice’s character that is gained by making her a few years younger than the rest of the main cast.

One could say that it’s subversive how Manabu and Yukari’s relationship sits neatly in the old paradigm of undefined schoolgirl Yuri crush, while Manabu’s (hella problematic) relationship with Alice is unambiguously explicit in its romantic and sexual nature. That must have felt novel in 2009 when this story was first released, but today it has notably less impact. Also, I’m sure I could write an entire paper on how an “impure” (putting aside the age gap) queer relationship is instrumentalized in the service of a “pure” Yuri love, but frankly I’m too exhausted by the belabored explanations of the Copenhagen Interpretation and wave function collapses to bother.

The biggest flaw of this manga is that the book itself is a poor choice for visual adaptation. The vast majority of the story is told in narration by Manabu, and there are few if any moments that let the visuals speak for themselves. That said, there is one extremely funny moment that takes advantage of the medium.

Given its age, I can forgive a few of its sins. (The fact that a flip phone played a major role in the plot did get a chuckle out of me.) That said, it pales in comparison to a short story collection made from a very similar mold: Last and First Idol. Where the edgy elements in Qualia just made me wince, the visceral gore and violence of LAFI played punctuated Gengen Kunano’s biting satire, be it for idols, gacha, or whatever. Qualia plays it very straight which lessens its appeal to me.

I’d say that if you are in the pocket for some sci-fi Yuri and don’t mind a misstep or two, Qualia the Purple could be worth your time. But I would suggest the light novel over this manga collection.

Ratings:

Art – 6 Not a whole lot to write home about visually; doesn’t take advantage of the medium enough
Story – 6 More disjointed than compelling
Characters – 5 What’s on the page is pretty stock
Service – 1 Higher if you like detailed explanations of Schrodinger’s Cat
Yuri – 5 / LGBTQ – 5 Some old-school yearning, but also has a queer relationship as a plot element

Overall – 6 Would have more impact if this release time-traveled back to 2009

Thank you to Seven Seas, who provided me with a review copy.

Matt Marcus is a cohost of various projects on the Pitch Drop Podcast Network, as well as the writer for the blog Oh My God, They Were Bandmates analyzing How Do We Relationship in greater depth.



Yuri Network News – (百合ネットワークニュース) – December 21, 2024

December 21st, 2024

In black block letters, YNN Yuri Network News. On the left, in black silhouette, a woman with a broad brim hat and dress stands, a woman in a tight outfit sits against the Y. Art by Mari Kurisato for Okazu

Anime News

While it’s not Yuri in any sense, Magilumiere is a very affirming series about adult women – and it is getting a second season! Alex Mateo has the details on ANN. I’m really pleased by this news, as I look forward to every episode.

Look Back has received a nomination for this year’s Annie Awards. ANN”s Crystalynn Hodgkins has the news. I still haven’t been able to bring myself to watch it. ^_^;

 

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Yuri Manga

Galette WORKS has announced an imminent second English-language Galette Magazine Kickstarter. Click to be notified when it opens.

Yen Press has licensed Convenient Semi-Friend, a sketchy looking roommate story. ^_^

Don’t forget to pre-order She Loves To Cook And She Loves To Eat, Volume 5, which will hit EN shelves in January!

Utatane Yuu’s Odoriba ni Skirt ga Naru, Volume 5 ( 踊り場にスカートが鳴る) hit shelves this week in Japan! It’s love, it’s intense emotion, it’s longing, it’s ballroom dancing!

Volume 1 of Shibori Kazuko’s Genjitsui Sekai Demo Shiawasenishite Kudasai, Ne? (現実世界でも幸せにしてくださいね?) is a reverse isekai story in which characters from a game come to our world to interact with their “hero,” who is a lonely women who actually needs some self-esteem. This series runs in Comic Yuri Hime.

Chapter 3 of Morishima Akiko‘s Hitorime is up on Amazon JP Kindle, and chapter 2 of the English edition of THE SINGLE LIFE: A 60-year old lesbian who is living single and alone, is up on US Kindle.

Via narandearuite on X, for folks who liked the original, a Fragtime Anthology (fragtimeアンソロジー) is in the works.

Akashi, the creator of Still Sick, has a new series with Ichihatsu Yuzuko, Sweet Lime Juice (スイート・ライムジュース) about two women who meet again after years of one-sided dislike. Check out sample pages in Japanese on Kadokawa.

I freely admit I have been paying no attention to Anemone ha Netsu wo Obiru (アネモネは熱を帯びる), but MangaTime Kirara on X says that Volume 8 is out now in Japan! Yen Press has licensed this series as The Anemone Feels The Heat to be released in March 2025.

Yuama, creator of The Summer You Were There, has a new series coming out in Summer 2025, according to their post on X.

 

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Yuri Light Novels

In terrific news, inori,’s fantasy series The Girl Who Wants to Be a Hero and the Girl Who Ought to Be a Hero, Vol. 1 has been licensed by Yen Press. Maybe we’ll get a chance to get the extremely fun acrylic standee I got with my copy of Volume 1 in Japanese, as an extra if we ask Yen nicely. (I spoke about the lack of extras yesterday on Bluesky. There is a market for this stuff, and I hope we get some!)

Via Yuri Navi, Teren Mikami has a new light novel, this time illustrated by Yuri Is My Job‘s Miman, Makemasenkara to Iiharu Kao no Ii Onnanoko o, Zenryoku de Kuppukusaseru Yuri no Ohanashi (負けませんからと言い張る顔のいい女の子を、全力で屈服させる百合のお話), is being debuted at Comiket. The JP Kindle version is available in Japan.

 

Yuri Live Action

Via YNN Correspondent CW, Shandou Yuki’s Call Me By No Name (コールミー・バイ・ノーネーム) is getting a live-action series. I absolutely remember reading this novel, but I never reviewed it here on Okazu.

 

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Other News

Justin Guererro has put together Tools To Get You Started In Webcomics over at KComics Beat.

The KyoAni shop is celebrating 15 years of K-ON! with cute goods.

We end on a somber note today, remembering Takahashi Macoto, who passed away last month. He is one of the folks responsible for our ideal of what Shoujo and Yuri art looks like and creator of proto-Yuri manga, Sakura Namiki. His doll-like girls with sparkles and hearts in their eyse influenced generations of mangaka. Anita Tai on ANN has the news. In 2014, I reviewed an artbook I had picked up in Nakano Mandarake, Akogare – Takahashi Makoto Collection.

 

If you’d like to support Yuri journalism and research, Patreon and Ko-Fi are where we currently accept subscriptions and tips.  Our goal now, into 2024, is to raise our guest writers’ wages to above industry standard, which are too low!

Your support goes straight to paying for Guest Reviews, folks helping with videos, site maintenance, managing the Yuricon Store and directly supporting other Yuri creators. Just $5/month makes a huge impact! Become part of the Okazu family!

Become a part of the Yuri Network, by being a YNN Correspondent: Contact Us with any Yuri-related news you want to share with us.



The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Volume 8

December 20th, 2024

A young woman with long silver hair in a blue and white dress, sits crowned on a throne, holding a scepter. Behind her, a girl with collar-length blonde hair in a pink outfit looks off to the left.Once upon a time Anisphia Palettia, the Crown Princess despite herself, was concerned that she would one day have to give up her studies into the science of magicology and rule the Kingdom. But that was before she rescued Euphilia, fell in love with her and changed the country forever. Now Euphie reigns as Queen, and Anis is free to pursue her dreams. But nothing is ever that simple. Together Euphie and Anis must find a way to stop a rebellion by the Western aristocracy against the Queen and a possible commoner uprising against the corrupt nobility.

I have never, in my entire life enjoyed a book of people talking over the tedious details of diplomacy and politics as much as I have The Magical Revolution of the Reincarnated Princess and the Genius Young Lady, Volume 8, written by Piero Karasu, illustrated by Yuri Kisaragi. I’m not kidding, either. This book has stepped well past the after-happily-ever-after, and even past the let’s-build-the-future of previous volumes, and landed kneed deep in “politics is a quagmire of competing agendas.”

Both Euphie and Anis are enraged at the Western nobles – each on the other’s behalf – and together with their privy council, they must find a way to avoid catastrophe, encourage prosperity and harmony and stick it to the most corrupt of the nobles in a way that both punishes them for their transgressions and gives them an opportunity to redeem themselves. And you know, they do find that way. Whether it will work remains to be seen, but as a strategy, it’s excellent. And…that’s most of this book.

If you have never once thought about how complicated it is to rule a country, this volume will absolutely dump the minutiae of every single frickin’ decision and the unintended consequences of every single frickin’ decision into your lap. I continue to be amazed at this series which would have ended with Euphie ascending the throne in most cases, as it just keeps going and adding layer and layers of the kind of responsibilities a Queen and her advisors might have to face. How do we reconcile with the Academy of Magic? How do we envision a new world of magicology even as we develop tools to make people’s lives better now? How do we manage corrupt nobles before their commoners revolt?

There is one other concern for Euphie and Anis and it’s one they are going to have to face sooner rather than later. Neither of them are truly human anymore. They are keenly aware of that and want to provide for a succession before it becomes a matter of crisis for themselves or the country they love. And they want to be able to spend as much time together as they can, to keep themselves as human as possible, as long as possible.

Because this book is mostly talking heads and policy, the final pages provide a fighting tournament in which we get the fighting tournament equivalent of Anis walking away in slow motion from an exploding building. It’s worth every page of policy discussion to get there. ^_^

Ratings:

Art – Female characters standing, looking pensive, upset or sad. The art makes me pensive, upset and sad.
Story – 9 Really
Characters – 10
Service – Almost none
Yuri – 10

Overall – 9

Let us not forget the entirely eye-opening bitchiness of the former rulers of their kingdom as they cheerfully gossip in the stands of the tournament while Euphie boggles. That was so extremely human.

Volume 9 of  Tensei Oujo to Tensai Reijou no Mahou Kakumei (転生王女と天才令嬢の魔法革命) is out now in Japanese, Volume 10 is on the way in February. In English, Volumes 1-6  of the manga are out now from Yen Press.

Many thanks to Yen Press for a review copy of this volume.