Re: Types of emotional reactions to KS
Posted: Mon Jul 28, 2014 4:50 pm
My eyes well'd up pretty bad from the super emotional scenes and I laughed whenever Kenji was around. xD
(Where's the Walkthrough?)
https://ks.fhs.sh/
I categorically deny that Spunky loves it up the ass. Also that my ahoge and swaggervest aren't totally rockin', yo.ParagonTerminus wrote:Emi and Hisao are real and disguised as Spunky and Atario.
I think you know where this is going.
Emi:SpunkySix wrote:I was Emi all along.
The power of Spunky's devotion drew Emi into our world, but lacking a real body she merged with him to survive. They can freely switch personalities, but Emi usually stays dormant inside his mind, which is a very nice place to live, with a comfortable apartment and a track. Hisao's sweatervest is an artifact with enough power to allow him to transcend the boundary between real and fake, and he used it to come here to bring Emi back. The three of them are in a bizarre love triangle, with Emi in the middle. The shift happened during her route, soon after the track shed scene, giving both of them a chance, but Spunky has the advantage, knowing the events of her entire route and her past.ParagonTerminus wrote: Emi and Hisao are real and disguised as Spunky and Atario.
I... I... okay.FelOnyx wrote:TheoryParagonTerminus wrote: Emi and Hisao are real and disguised as Spunky and Atario.
On Emi's route, I can't remember anymore whether I cried, but it wouldn't have been at the end. It would have been during Hisao's determination speech, and possibly Emi's favorite color speech.SpunkySix wrote:Aaaaaaanyways, did anybody else feel too empty to actually break down and cry after the game was over? I shed a few tears at the grave scene, but at the end nothing came and I just sort of went into zombie mode until I fell asleep, then woke up in a flurry.
That an "I approve" OK, or a "I am thoroughly weirded out" OK? Or something between the two?SpunkySix wrote:I... I... okay.FelOnyx wrote:TheoryParagonTerminus wrote: Emi and Hisao are real and disguised as Spunky and Atario.
Aaaaaaanyways, did anybody else feel too empty to actually break down and cry after the game was over? I shed a few tears at the grave scene, but at the end nothing came and I just sort of went into zombie mode until I fell asleep, then woke up in a flurry.
Welcome! 100% completion is mandatory (there's your "more of the story" ), the fanfiction and artwork thread are available to treat withdrawal symptoms afterward because there will never be a sequel.McAwesome wrote:It's my first post on this forum, so yeah, HI.
First of all, I'm not the kind of person that often cries, I'm always trying to keep my feelings to myself. The last time i cried was on my friend's funeral a year ago. Since then I've never shed a tear. Until i played KS.
So far I've only played the Lilly's route, and I cried a lot. And by "a lot" I mean A LOT. Every little detail about her, like for example when she wanted Hisao to "see" like she does or when she wanted to "see" what does Hisao look like. All this little details literally brought a tear to my eye. And seeing a person so confident and ambitious even if she's kind of disabled was so touching and it just made me cheerful. I've got the good ending after my first playthrough, and after that I felt happy for them, but at the same moment i felt kind of sad, because i wanted to see more of this story.
I've played a lot of games, read a lot of books and i've never cried that much. KS for me was a great experience and I really regret that i didn't play it earlier.
Yes, now I know there were cliches of course, but when I was playing I didn't pay much attention to it to be honest. And I don't really know if I should play more of this game, you know, "the feels". :3Potato wrote:Welcome! 100% completion is mandatory (there's your "more of the story" ), the fanfiction and artwork thread are available to treat withdrawal symptoms afterward because there will never be a sequel.McAwesome wrote:It's my first post on this forum, so yeah, HI.
First of all, I'm not the kind of person that often cries, I'm always trying to keep my feelings to myself. The last time i cried was on my friend's funeral a year ago. Since then I've never shed a tear. Until i played KS.
So far I've only played the Lilly's route, and I cried a lot. And by "a lot" I mean A LOT. Every little detail about her, like for example when she wanted Hisao to "see" like she does or when she wanted to "see" what does Hisao look like. All this little details literally brought a tear to my eye. And seeing a person so confident and ambitious even if she's kind of disabled was so touching and it just made me cheerful. I've got the good ending after my first playthrough, and after that I felt happy for them, but at the same moment i felt kind of sad, because i wanted to see more of this story.
I've played a lot of games, read a lot of books and i've never cried that much. KS for me was a great experience and I really regret that i didn't play it earlier.
I always found the scene where she tries to see what Hisao looks like too cliche to be sad.
I know it for you. You should.McAwesome wrote:And I don't really know if I should play more of this game...
Er… I don't think it was intended to be sad. Intimate, touching¹, sweet. Not sad.Potato wrote:I always found the scene where she tries to see what Hisao looks like too cliche to be sad.
I had it the other way around, i didnt get that because i played the game, i got it because i didn't, thoughts about it kept racing trough my head.Broomhead wrote:When I first played I only made it to the middle of act 3 (Castling) before I left for what I thought would be my own good. I had a bit of depression and on-and-off emotion trauma, and not just as a reaction.
As I was reading these stories, I was thinking about how incredibly hard it would be to find anything like them here in the USA. Over here we "medicalize" depression. That's a reasonable approach to the problem, because it makes depression seem like an unnatural intrusion into the orderly march of life, and so conveniently blinds us to the frightening fact that despair is always an option for us. For the characters in these stories, though, despair is just around the corner! Apparently in Japan lots of people come to know that fact firsthand, especially when they're young and don't yet really fit anywhere in the world they are growing up to confront.
These aren't stories that fit anywhere in the familiar manga categories, but they're good stories, because they're about a part of life that's as real as the good parts.