

Welcome to Otome, visual dating games made with women in mind.
The school days seem to just pass by and all that can cheer her up are text messages with a person she's never seen.
This is a throwback to Super Robot anime from the '70s, the protagonists are good and brightly coloured, the antagonists are evil and dark, and the heroes yell out all the names of their robot's attack.
She loves sex and isn't above mixing business and pleasure.
Rei prides herself on seducing both men and women into her bed.
Bishōjo games began to appear in Japan in the beginning days of personal computers.
The first bishōjo game commercialized in Japan appeared in 1982 as Night Life by Koei.
They enjoy a healthy fandom, but many acclaimed titles remain in their native Japanese—frustrating, because romance and relationship games are more popular than ever.
Lots of players get turned onto these aspects from story and character-driven Bio Ware games like Dragon Age, and if you’re a fan of those, I have a few recommendations to help welcome you into the otome genre.
They form a sizeable fraction of the Japanese market: the most popular have sold over a million copies, and they make up the majority of offline PC games in Japan.
Nevertheless, only a few titles of this sort have been translated or commercialized outside of East Asia.