To get pass it you need to make these choices: "It slipped my mind", "Obey", "Tighter is better", "Insert fingers", "Mention the dildo", "Follow them".Cant get past Jessica story. Must be possible to refuse Jessica/Chloe scene without becoming a bloody simp
Please add this to main page, the actual link is dead and this one still worksHere's another download link (it wont be added to my other post as this will be DMCA'd soon™)
PC:You must be registered to see the links
Mac:You must be registered to see the links
The links keep getting taken down by the DevNopy and Mega links are down
So, in summary, there is no way forward without simping. And, it's all set up by yet another decision by the MC that is painfully obvious in its stupidity, but the player can't stop. There's a lot about this game that's good, but that gets frustrating.To get pass it you need to make these choices: "It slipped my mind", "Obey", "Tighter is better", "Insert fingers", "Mention the dildo", "Follow them".
Ehh... MC is pretty passive to begin with. It's only after he gets into the loop and starts experimenting that he understands how being assertive can be awesome and how some women really like it. Jessica is not that easy however because she has a good amount of disdain for MC and is quite domineering herself (aka a bitch) so going with Chloe's suggestions is a good way to bridge the gap.So, in summary, there is no way forward without simping. And, it's all set up by yet another decision by the MC that is painfully obvious in its stupidity, but the player can't stop. There's a lot about this game that's good, but that gets frustrating.
It's almost as if people don't quite understand the specific meanings of terms like "simp" (giving in a one-sided relationship) or "NTR" (having a partner stolen by another) and use them very broadly.Ehh... MC is pretty passive to begin with. It's only after he gets into the loop and starts experimenting that he understands how being assertive can be awesome and how some women really like it. Jessica is not that easy however because she has a good amount of disdain for MC and is quite domineering herself (aka a bitch) so going with Chloe's suggestions is a good way to bridge the gap.
Also, simping involves not getting anything (truly) for your efforts and our boy does get what he wants in the end
I think you're confusing the strong copyleft on GPL and such with the LGPL. For GPL, if you link code against something, the combined work has to be available under the GPL and you would have to distribute your source code. I believe also this wouldn't apply to any copyright that applied to images, story, etc.I don't really think that's possible. I am not a lawyer, but at least part of RenPy is released under LPGL, which here means Renpy Games have to be distributed under manner compatible with it. Which means, a) they cant really copyright it as derivative work, and what it is more important b) it can be sold, but source code has to be freely distributed.
Well, thing is LGPL allows proprietary software to use libraries licensed under it, but proprietary software has to be separated. That's why most of such software actually uses system wide shared libraries. If they ship said libraries with software, then it qualifies as derivative work, and by letter of LGPL cant be copyrighted. If you take any RenPy game, it has said libraries shipped with it, under libs. It doesn't use system wide shared libraries.However, this doesn't apply to LGPL, and is typically why reusable things like Ren'Py are not distributed under GPL, they actually choose LGPL so it can be incorporated into commercial works. If they didn't, too many people would choose to use another product as they couldn't have control of their own works.
RenPy is not LGPL licensed, it's licensed under MIT, yet for purpose of LGPL, it's derivative work of LGPL, and precisely because of it, all requirements of LGPL have to be met. Actually, RenPyBasically all that is required in this case is the developer must distribute or make available the source code of the LGPL product (i.e. Ren'Py). None of this applies to the derivative work and their original work, it just applies to Ren'Py.
RenPy games, are RenpPy, not product of it, but RenPy which runs series of pictures and text.Portions of Ren'Py are derived from source code that is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License, so Ren'Py games must be distributed in a manner that satisfies the LGPL.
What they can copyright?Also your suggestion that they "can't copyright it" is totally false,
Well, yes, but if they extract their own work from , there is no the game. Why somebody of those actually making a lot of money, like Summertime Saga or ICSTOR never tried to claim copyright?licenses cannot override a person's right to copyright in their work, it's happens automatically, including for derivative works. Wherein someone has a restriction because of incorporating LGPL or GPL code into their work, they always retain the copyright to their original work and they can always rip out Ren'Py and produce a new work without it.
Grind 18% of missing renders and 40% of missing animations, and then 90% of the code in three days? Not a chance, if they don't want another 24 hour office day and bugfest. Next week for sure.oh damn, 80% already... Do yall think it's gonna drop this month?
Per Patreon, they were shooting for the end of this month (not a promise though) which would be an incredibly quick turnaround. The progress stats on their website move very inconsistently. It went from 0% to 25% in a couple of days after the most recent release and then didn't move for a while. There's no pattern with how much it goes up or when it's updated. I'd give it a couple of weeks past month's end. I'd still be very satisfied with that since it would still be a quick turnaround.oh damn, 80% already... Do yall think it's gonna drop this month?
The bugged progression in E5 is fixed, they released a hotfix along with official Android version. And have they mentioned why they dropped? No. That's Inceton's biggest downside that really keeps me from supporting, since the communication is almost non-existent.Considering S2E5 came out after an all night session and the bugged progression is apparently not being fixed
Did they ever mention why? I'm mostly just curious as I don't mind bugs in Renpy games too much since they are very easy to circumvent.
As Ren'Py team suggests:Well, thing is LGPL allows proprietary software to use libraries licensed under it, but proprietary software has to be separated. That's why most of such software actually uses system wide shared libraries. If they ship said libraries with software, then it qualifies as derivative work, and by letter of LGPL cant be copyrighted. If you take any RenPy game, it has said libraries shipped with it, under libs. It doesn't use system wide shared libraries.
RenPy is not LGPL licensed, it's licensed under MIT, yet for purpose of LGPL, it's derivative work of LGPL, and precisely because of it, all requirements of LGPL have to be met. Actually, RenPyYou must be registered to see the linksabout it.
RenPy games, are RenpPy, not product of it, but RenPy which runs series of pictures and text.
What they can copyright?
Characters? I am not sure they can.
Their code contributions? It's already open sourced. IE, it's enough to decompile rpc and rpa files, and you can see everything, reverse engineer and what's not. Not to mention it's shipped and cant work without LGPL libraries.
Story... well yes. But it has to be separated in order to
Well, yes, but if they extract their own work from , there is no the game. Why somebody of those actually making a lot of money, like Summertime Saga or ICSTOR never tried to claim copyright?
PS; for automatic part. I already wrote about it. Berne convention does not mention software, not surprisingly as it's legal document of XIX century. Some countries, like US or Germany, interpret software as literary works, but it's applicable only in those countries. That's actually how piracy works, as soon as software is not linked with US DMCA complaints are simply ignored, but I digress here.
This should be enough to achieve compliance with everything that Ren'Py includes to every game distribution package.Although we are unable to provide legal advice, we believe compliance can be achieved by including a copy of this license with every copy of Ren'Py you distribute, and linking to this license from your project's README file or App Store description. We suggest using the wording:
This program contains free software licensed under a number of licenses, including the GNU Lesser General Public License. A complete list of software is available atYou must be registered to see the links.