@azs_snowflake Yes Im soooo glad someone pointed it out. I wanted more of the enemies part wih sylus but they wrapped it up pretty quickly. Of course Im in love with his domestic and loving side but like give us more before becoming lovers
infold treats their playerbase as dumb and easy to please, and honestly i can't even blame them, considering how the global side of the fandom will eat up any slop they give us as long as it's new and shiny to give them instant gratification. a bunch of ipad kids truly
I genuinely don't understand why they're so stubborn when it comes to the missing contents, especially the standard cards. They're just 3-star and 4-star cards, they don't need kindleds, the 3-star ones don't even need a story. It's like they're doing this just to spite us atp
I’m starting to suspect that this might actually be the kind of new user profile Infold is aiming for.
Fans of the first five male leads—especially long-term players—are honestly “too demanding.”
We want a solid main story, meaningful bonds, high-quality cards, fair treatment for each character, coherent writing, and for the developers to follow through on their promises. That’s because we’re not just paying for a pretty face—we’ve built long-term emotional connections with these characters.
But short-term players are different.
All it takes is a striking design that fits a certain market aesthetic, a chapter or two of story, a few high-impact cards, and about half a year of banner cycles—that’s enough to complete one round of monetization.
Once that group loses interest, they can just move on to the next wave.
With AI and industrialized production becoming more advanced, new LIs can be introduced one after another. Characters are no longer something that needs long-term emotional investment—they’re becoming products designed to quickly test the market and efficiently capture revenue.