Making - Lovers
And somehow, that’s the most radical love story of them all.
But the true genius of Making Lovers isn't the setting—it's the pace . Making Lovers
You watch the protagonist and his chosen partner navigate the awkward silence of a second date. You witness the quiet war over who pays the bill. You endure the painfully real conversation about moving in together—who snores, who leaves dishes in the sink, who hogs the blanket. The game dares to ask: Are you actually fun to live with? And somehow, that’s the most radical love story
One route, in particular, encapsulates this ethos. The heroine, Ako, is a chaotic, adorable mess who works three part-time jobs. She confesses first, impulsively, in a convenience store parking lot at 2 AM. Most games would fade to white. Making Lovers instead gives you a scene where she borrows your hoodie, falls asleep on your couch, and you spend the next morning trying to find her a better apartment because her current one has mold. That’s not romance as fantasy. That’s romance as maintenance . You witness the quiet war over who pays the bill
In most dating sims, the story ends at "I love you." In Making Lovers , that happens around hour two. The remaining twenty hours are dedicated to something far more terrifying: compatibility .