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Steins;Gate: Darling of Loving Vows

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Producer(s)
  
Naotaka Hayashi

Mode(s)
  
Single-player

Series
  
Science Adventure

Publisher
  
5pb.

Writer(s)
  
Tatsuya Matsubara

Initial release date
  
16 June 2011

Developer
  
5pb.

Genre
  
Visual novel

Steins;Gate: Darling of Loving Vows SteinsGate Darling of Loving Vows Cast Images Behind The

Platforms
  
PlayStation Vita, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Portable, Xbox 360, iOS

Similar
  
Science Adventure games, 5pb games, Adventure games

Steins;Gate: Darling of Loving Vows, known in Japan as Steins;Gate: Hiyoku Renri no Darling, is a visual novel video game developed by 5pb., originally released for the Xbox 360 in 2011, and then ported to multiple other platforms in 2012 and 2013. It is part of the Science Adventure series, and a spin-off from the 2009 game Steins;Gate. The game is a romantic comedy set in a different world from the one in the original Steins;Gate, where the player builds romantic relationships with Steins;Gate characters. By making certain choices and interacting with the player character's cell phone, the player can affect the direction of the plot.

Contents

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The game was produced by Naotaka Hayashi, and featured scenario supervision by Tatsuya Matsubara, as opposed to the original Steins;Gate, where 5pb.'s Chiyomaru Shikura planned the story on his own; after having worked on the anime adaptation of Steins;Gate, he realized that, with the game world being fully established, he could let other writers work on it and bring in new ideas. The Xbox 360 release sold well, helping the sales of the Xbox 360 console in Japan. Critics enjoyed the game's writing and art, but criticized the opening theme.

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Synopsis

Steins;Gate: Darling of Loving Vows SteinsGate Hiyoku Renri no Darling

Darling of Loving Vows is a spin-off from Steins;Gate, and is a romantic comedy visual novel taking place in a different world line than those in the original game. In the world line the game takes place in, the characters still have the possibility to change the past by using D-mails, but SERN has little influence and does not have rounders hunt the main cast. Instead, the player character Rintaro Okabe's main problem is paying the bills for the laboratory, having to take a part-time job as a waiter. The game has multiple routes, each focusing on Okabe building a romantic relationship with one of the female characters from Steins;Gate. The player affects the direction of the plot by picking choices, by answering Okabe's phone, and by clicking on highlighted text within text messages on the phone. There game does not feature any game over states or routes where the player loses.

Development and release

Steins;Gate: Darling of Loving Vows STEINSGATE SteinsGate Hiyoku Renri no Darling

The game was developed by 5pb., and was produced by Naotaka Hayashi. While 5pb.'s Chiyomaru Shikura planned the story for the original Steins;Gate game on his own, Darling of Loving Vows was written by other writers under scenario supervision by Tatsuya Matsubara. This change came from when Shikura was working on the anime adaptation of Steins;Gate, and realized that since the concept of the game's world had been fully established, he could let other writers who understand the world work on Steins;Gate projects and bring new ideas to it.

Darling of Loving Vows was announced in February 2011 by Famitsu, and was described as a fan disc. It was originally released for the Xbox 360 on June 16, 2011, and was later released for several other platforms: the PlayStation Portable on April 26, 2012, the PlayStation 3 on May 24, 2012, the PlayStation Vita on March 14, 2013, and iOS on October 3, 2013. The Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and PlayStation Vita versions were both available separately and in bundles with the original Steins;Gate; the PlayStation Vita bundle also included a ticket to Steins;Gate: The Movie − Load Region of Déjà Vu and a metal charm.

Reception

During its debut week, the Xbox 360 version was the fourth best selling game in Japan, with 31,666 copies sold, and with the Steins;Gate bundle in fifth place, selling an additional 11,041 copies; this boosted sales of the Xbox 360 console, putting it in seventh place on the Japanese hardware charts for the week. The PlayStation Portable version was the sixth best selling game in Japan during its first week, with 24,849 copies sold, while the PlayStation 3 version was the eighteenth with 5,397 copies sold and an additional 9,223 copies of the PlayStation 3 Steins;Gate bundle. The PlayStation Vita version, however, did not enter the weekly top 20 charts at all during its debut week.

Zenji Ishii at Famitsu compared Darling of Loving Vows favorably to other bishōjo games, saying that it manages to create drama and tension despite how the game does not have a tragic element to it like the original Steins;Gate. He praised the writing as the work of a skilled scenario writer with a great understanding of the characters and world, and said that it manages to develop the characters and world further, giving them more depth, and that the portrayal of characters' emotions was well handled, allowing the player to feel immersed in the world. He particularly cited Luka and Moeka's routes as interesting, due to the different atmosphere that comes with a romantic route with an otokonoko character, and how the game manages to make the player reconsider their opinion on Moeka from the original Steins;Gate. He did note that because of the story's sense of safety and how it does not go off into a more serious direction, the game might feel unsatisfying and lacking of something impactful to some players, but also said that it fits in with the tone of the early chapters of the original Steins;Gate, where he considered the characters' everyday activities and light conversation part of what makes the game good. Richard Eisenbeis at Kotaku called the art excellent, and said that the game might "sate [players'] appetites" while waiting for the then upcoming Steins;Gate 0 game. Patrick Gann of RPGFan criticized the game's opening theme, "La*La*La Labolution", as "wretched", particularly noting the singers' "super-cute, super-nasal unison choir thing", and saying that it alone ruins his listening experience of the Steins;Gate series music album. Famitsu gave the PlayStation Vita version of the game their "Gold Award".

References

Steins;Gate: Darling of Loving Vows Wikipedia