All There in the Manual: The online manual explains much of what the game doesn't, including the energy meter, saving, and useful items. Arc Words: Along with " love", which is to contrast the violence found in RPGs and the "Hero" himself, "open the door" also shows up a lot.Astral Finale: The climax of the game involves building a rocket ship to travel to the Moon, the location of the Dragon Castle.Turns out that the true "door" to open was not the one on the moon, but the door in the boy's bedroom in the real world. The latter means to bring back the moonlight and free the inhabits of the game world. Despite how it seems, the "door" in question is not the one on the Moon, blocked by Rumroms. Artistic License Engineering: The Invisible Boy gets involved in the construction of a rocket ship, and is tasked with collecting various materials for it.It's actually the door in the boy's bedroom in the real world. Attack! Attack! Attack!: Played for Laughs: At the end of the "Fake" segment, the hero keeps attacking the Dragon at 9999 damage per turn.The navigation system is built from an old robot's circuit, the ship's engine is made from a single firework, a bottle of alcohol serves as the fuel, the cooling system is built using a fridge fished out of a lake, and a video game console (also found in the same lake) is used as the ship's power console. Eventually, the hero not only prevents the dragon from having a turn but even attacks before the battle message finishes scrolling. This frequency increases until the boy's mother tells him to stop playing and go to bed. Despite his best efforts, the Invisible Boy fails to open it, much to the guardians' confusion.īittersweet Ending: After finally completing the rocket to reach the Moon with, you learn from its guardians, the Moon Queen and the Dragon, that the only way to bring back the moonlight is to " open the door".Bestiality Is Depraved: Darlia makes several romantic and lustful comments about her pet Perogon, and even calls it her "boyfriend" at one point.It takes a much darker turn during the ending, where the Hero just keeps slaughtering everyone with insanely powerful attacks, with no one able to stop him. Just then, The Hero, who snuck aboard the Invisible Boy's rocket, kills everyone on the moon, including the Boy himself, and the Hero then falls apart. The boy then finds himself back in the real world, thanks to his mother waking him up. When given the option to continue playing, if you choose "Yes", you're sucked into the TV, the end. Choosing not to continue the game ends with the player instead turning off the game and going outside, since it's still just a game.
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