You must be 18+ to view this content

Dreamy Planet may contain content you must be 18+ to view.

Are you 18 years of age or older?

or Return to itch.io

A downloadable game for Windows and Linux

Buy Now$6.99 USD or more

Available in English, 简体中文, and Русский


Haruka and Shiina used to be inseparable. They grew up together, went to school together, and ardently believed that they would always be best friends.


That was before Haruka’s breakdown, however.

Worn down by her demanding job as a nurse, Haruka abandons her old life, and her old best friend, and moves back in with her parents. Believing herself to be a failure, and too ashamed to see Shiina again, Haruka retreats into herself and her depression, and despairs.

It isn’t until almost five years later that Haruka and Shiina reunite. At Shiina’s behest, the pair of them make an impromptu trip to a favourite haunt of theirs from their youth: an outdated theme park on the outskirts of Nara called Dreamy Planet.

Dreamy Planet was once a popular park, but it has since fallen into disrepair. The park was closed down several years ago, owing to dwindling attendance numbers, and it has been left in a miserable state: the spinning teacups, the roller coasters, and the carousel all left to rust.

Together again, Haruka and Shiina pick their way through Dreamy Planet’s carcass, and as they do, they recall fond memories from their past. Dreamy Planet might be beyond salvaging, but perhaps their relationship can still be saved – if only Haruka can find the courage to finally tell Shiina how she really feels.

  • About 40k words of text (approx 2-3 hours of reading)
  • A kinetic story with no choices/branches
  • Custom character artwork
  • A large variety of gorgeously rendered backgrounds
  • A custom OST
  • A dreamy, nostalgic tone
  • A very cute (and very tortured) heroine ♥


The adult patch for the Steam version of the game can be downloaded here for free.
If you want to patch the all ages version of the game, download this file, drop it into the 'game' folder inside Dreamy Planet, and rewrite the existing adult.rpa file with the new one. You'll know if the game has been patched correctly because the window title will change to Dreamy Planet (18+).



Writing/programming: ebi-hime
Character art: Rythae
Background art: Foxeleos
Music: Sleepy Agents
GUI: Haofeng
Opening movie: Phinalgo
Chinese translation: Yuri Atelier
Russian translation: Mikhail "KornyPony" Burov-Kosolapin

Please note: While this is a yuri story about a romantic relationship between two women, the protagonist, Haruka, is engaged to a man throughout the duration of the story. This is an important plot point, which gets referenced several times.

StatusReleased
PlatformsWindows, Linux
Rating
Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars
(8 total ratings)
Authorebi-hime
GenreVisual Novel
TagsAdult, Anime, Atmospheric, Erotic, Female Protagonist, Lesbian, LGBT, Mental Health, Romance, Yuri
Average sessionA few hours
LanguagesEnglish, Russian, Chinese (Simplified)
LinksSteam

Purchase

Buy Now$6.99 USD or more

In order to download this game you must purchase it at or above the minimum price of $6.99 USD. Your purchase comes with a Steam key. You will get access to the following files:

DreamyPlanet-1.01-adult.zip
DreamyPlanet-1.01-allages.zip 496 MB

Comments

Log in with itch.io to leave a comment.

Definitely as gloomy as advertised, but it is very well done--notably the music, which is very different from the scores of your other games which I have played, but equally as good. 

Dreamy Planet is a sad, depressing visual novel with a small glimmer of hope in the very end. The mood of the story is gloomy and provokes the feeling of saudade. The writing captures Haruka's troubled feelings perfectly. 

(+4)(-5)

Hello, thanks for your work!

I wanted to point out that there's an unnecessary (IMO) microaggression against homeless people near the beginning of the game.

While it is true that homeless people can be scary because they can be unkempt, rude about begging, etc., they are still people. Many of them have been failed by society, as opposed to being bad people.

I think using homeless people/scroungers as the source of fear doesn't add value to the narrative in the part of the story. It could be swapped out for something else, e.g. wildlife scrounging for leftover food.

Some food for thought 🙂

(1 edit) (+3)(-1)

I don't recall any of the characters in the story saying that homeless people aren't people, or that they are all inherently bad. The characters are just being cautious, given they are in a secluded location and nobody else knows where they are. I think it makes sense that they would be wary about any strangers they might encounter, given the circumstances.

I apologise if this offhand remark seemed like a dig at homeless people in general; that was not the intention.

(1 edit) (+4)(-4)

I didn't perceive it as particularly insulting to homeless people. The issue I take with it is that the homeless are even mentioned at all and that they're presented as something to fear. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/microaggression. It's a small thing, but I think all works of art&media can spread positivity or negativity, and I think this is unnecessary negativity.

It seems unnecessary since to me, the goal of the narrative in that section is to show the personalities of the two; Haruka is more timid and Shiina is more bold. This narrative goal can be achieved without associating a negative emotion to people who are down on their luck, even if that negative emotion is founded in real experiences. It would be different if the section also offered some social commentary, but that's not the case.

You're welcome to stick to your artistic vision, but I think some small changes to that section would improve it. Perhaps even just remove "homeless" and keep "scroungers". The groups don't fully overlap; there are scroungers with homes.

Again, thanks for your work! Yuri is a niche genre and I'm glad you're contributing to the space.

(3 edits) (+3)(-2)

I guess diping into preconceived cliché is just being “like the other”, it’s easier to talk about ideas everyone “already kind of have” instead of trying to level up the game.

I wish story-tellers were more aware of their “world view” power - if not avoiding to strengthen unjust ideas - even challenging them the time of a story. It happens. Even. Yuri romance can be quite political (I think of the Vengeful hearth VN for instance <3).

(+2)(-1)

I'm not going to engage with this any further, but as a heads-up: if anybody else decides to reply to this thread, I'll probably delete their response, because I don't want the comments page of this visual novel being cluttered with a discussion about a single sentence in the story. I'll leave the original comment and response up, because I think it's relevant to the story and the poster provided some good points, but I don't want things getting too badly off topic.

(1 edit) (+2)

Just finished this VN. While I don't have quite the same association with abandoned theme parks, I thought this VN had some very powerful vibes to the point that it still worked for me and was quite emotional, and while it might sound weird to say that it was "fulfilling", it was still a very fulfilling, messy (I mean that as a compliment) story in its own way. As always I really enjoyed reading the author's notes to see where the inspiration for the story came from. Thanks for making.

(+2)

Oh, you read it very quickly! Thank you very much! <3
I'm glad that you enjoyed the story! The characters and their relationships are pretty messy, yeah, but hopefully it's to a believable degree!