
Reviewed work by Studio 404 · View on DLsite
You wander into a town that shouldn’t exist, and the women who live there want to catch you — this is a pixel-art stealth-escape game where the monster girls are the predators and you’re the prey. It’s aimed squarely at players who like reverse-rape (female-dominant) content wrapped in a horror-chase framework, with an older-woman-pursues-younger-guy flavor running through it. If the phrase “run, hide, get toyed with” sounds appealing rather than stressful, this is built for you.
What works

The core loop is the sell here, and it’s a genuinely coherent one. Instead of the usual RPG-Maker “walk into an enemy, watch a scene” pattern, Studio 404 leans on stealth: you’re skulking through an eerie town trying not to get spotted by monster girls who patrol it, and the tension of nearly being caught is the whole point. Pairing horror pacing with erotic payoff is a smart fit, because the same adrenaline that makes a chase scary makes the “caught” moment land harder. When the fantasy is being hunted and overpowered by a woman, a stealth-escape structure does more emotional work than a menu of static scenes ever could.
The pixel-art presentation supports that mood well. Dot-graphics horror has a specific charm — the low resolution leaves room for your imagination to fill in the unsettling parts, and it lets the town read as “wrong” and atmospheric without needing expensive high-res assets. The tags list Music as a feature, which matters more than it sounds for a horror-chase game; a good tension track and the audio cue of footsteps closing in are what make hide-and-seek feel like hide-and-seek rather than a spreadsheet of detection radii.

Two design choices deserve specific credit. First, the gallery is unlocked immediately, so all 13 scenes are available from the start — a small but genuinely player-respecting decision that spares you from grinding or getting hard-walled just to see content you paid for. Second, the “Body Double System” exists specifically to let you play at zero risk. In a stealth game where failure normally means a game-over screen and a reload, a built-in safety net lowers the frustration floor and lets more casual players actually experience the chase without rage-quitting. For a genre that often punishes mistakes harshly, baking in an off-ramp is thoughtful.
Thematically, the “elder girl, younger boy” and reverse-R framing is consistent from top to bottom. You’re the one being pursued, cornered, and played with, and the monster-girl cast plus the big-breasted, tall-woman tags all point at the same dominant-predator fantasy. When a work commits to one clear tone instead of hedging, it tends to satisfy the people who came for exactly that — and this one commits.
What doesn’t

The honest caveat is that the description sells atmosphere and structure but tells you almost nothing about depth. Thirteen scenes is a fair-but-modest count, and a stealth-escape game lives or dies on how varied its levels and monster-girl behaviors are — how many distinct pursuers there are, whether the hiding and evasion mechanics stay interesting past the first hour, and whether the “wits and tactics” pitch is real or just a patrol pattern you memorize. None of that is spelled out, so buyers going in blind should temper expectations about length and replay value until they’ve seen it in motion.
The other risk is the toolset. It’s built in Action Game Maker (Tkool MV), and the product page itself links to a startup-troubleshooting FAQ — a quiet acknowledgment that some players hit launch problems with this engine. That’s not a dealbreaker, but if you’re on an unusual setup, budget a little patience for getting it running. And as always with dot-art horror, the pixel style is a taste filter: if you want detailed, high-fidelity erotic art, the low-res aesthetic here will read as a downgrade rather than a mood.
Who should buy this

This is for reverse-rape fans who want their eroge with a pulse — people who enjoy being the hunted party, like the monster-girl and dominant-older-woman archetype, and don’t mind (or actively enjoy) a horror-tinged chase. English text is supported, so non-Japanese readers can play it fully without importing a translation or fighting a fan patch — the language barrier that sinks so many doujin titles isn’t an issue here. If you prefer purely relaxed, no-fail visual-novel-style eroge, the stealth framing may be more friction than you want, though the Body Double safety net softens that considerably.
Verdict

7 / 10 — a focused, atmospheric take on reverse-R that earns points for its stealth-escape structure, immediate gallery access, and beginner-friendly safety net, held back only by an unproven amount of long-term depth behind its 13 scenes.
Buy on DLsite (English Supported) →
This work supports English text on DLsite. No Japanese reading required.
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