
Reviewed work by opopoworld · View on DLsite
Acmesia is a BAKIN-built RPG where you play a veteran hunter sent to save a monster-besieged town, armed with a charm that turns out to be an “Acme Crystal” — a stone that powers you up when you make a girl climax. It’s a flat-chested harem fantasy with five impregnable heroines, aimed squarely at players who want lolicon-flavored, pure-love pregnancy content wrapped around a short, breezy RPG. If that combination of tags makes you nod rather than wince, the rest of this review is for you.
What works

The premise commits to its own bit. “Make her come, save the country” is a goofy hook, but the game wires it directly into the RPG loop: bonds with heroines feed back into combat power, which means H content isn’t bolted on as a reward — it’s the progression system. The five heroines also do the basic job of an ensemble well. You get the shy sister who runs the church soup kitchen, her bookish-but-secretly-lewd partner, a tsundere slum girl working bar shifts for her little sister, that little sister herself (a dreamy flower-seller who claims she can hear the flowers), and the hardworking princess-slash-mayor who summoned you in the first place. Each has a distinct silhouette in dialogue, and because every one of them is route-completable with a true ending, you don’t have to pick a favorite and mourn the rest.
The RPG layer is more substantial than you’d expect from a fetish-first BAKIN project. Hunting mode drives the story map-by-map with boss encounters, the town development sim unlocks shops and home upgrades as you progress, equipment identification is a genuine loot hook (with rumored game-breaking drops if you’re lucky), and the hunter training system lets you grind NPC companions into useful boss-fight allies or gold farms. None of these are deep on their own, but together they give the nine-or-so-hour runtime real texture — you’re not just clicking through battles to get to the next CG. Difficulty sits in a friendly pocket too: turn-based combat is approachable enough that players who normally bounce off RPGs can finish this one without grinding walls.

On the H side, the scenes lean into the flat-chested, petite body type without apology, and the pregnancy progression is treated as a proper arc rather than a single belly-CG epilogue. You get baby-making sex, the “take her along” mid-adventure scenes, event H including harem configurations, partial animation on every heroine, plus the usual array of dates, sleepovers at the protagonist’s house, and night visits. A recollection room is included, so you can revisit anything without a save-scumming archaeology dig. The protagonist himself is a quiet plus — he’s a competent, reasonably likable hunter rather than the silent self-insert blob or the leering creep that this subgenre often defaults to.
What doesn’t

The H content is wide but not deep. Animation quality is uneven — touching/foreplay scenes in particular get stiff hand motion and can’t strip the heroine partway, which is a small thing that adds up across forty-plus scenes. More noticeably, sex positions repeat heavily across heroines, which dulls the individuality the character writing works so hard to establish: five distinct personalities can start to feel like one scene with a different sprite swapped in. Voice acting is also absent, and given how strong the heroine designs are, the silence is felt.
The story is functional rather than memorable. It’s a tidy “save the frontier town” yarn that wraps up without overstaying its welcome, but don’t expect emotional peaks or a twist that lingers. One cosmetic oddity — the schoolgirl-uniform-plus-veil outfit on the church sisters reads as a slightly off design choice that some players will find charming and others will find jarring.
Who should buy this

If your shopping list includes flat-chested heroines, harem pregnancy arcs treated as a real progression, and an RPG that respects your time at around nine to ten hours, this is comfortably in your lane. Players who want big-breasted designs, deep mechanical RPG systems, dark or NTR-flavored scenarios, or fully animated and voiced H scenes should look elsewhere — Acmesia is unapologetically a pure-love, all-happy-ending package and doesn’t pretend otherwise.
Verdict

7.5 / 10 — A short, warm, mechanically tidy harem RPG that nails its niche of lolicon pregnancy pure-love content, held back from a higher score only by repetitive H positions and the absence of voice acting.
This is the Japanese-language store. International credit cards and PayPal are accepted. The game itself is in Japanese.
Tip: If the DLsite page opens in Japanese, use the language selector at the top-right of the page (globe icon) to switch to English.