PICTURED: Splash art from Opportunity: A Sugar Baby Story showing main character Jacqueline coming upon her daughter Aster and Aster’s babysitter Shruthi engaged in a game involving cat ears and makeup.

The following is an essay that I wrote in June of 2023 on Cohost. It was intended to mainly function as a value-add for a plea I was making at the time for people to purchase and review Opportunity: A Sugar Baby Story on the various platforms on which it retailed, but it wound up being one of my favorite pieces of writing I’d done on that site. The piece focuses on two core pillars of Opportunity’s narrative that tend to receive disproportionate amounts of attention: its queerness (which tends to get downplayed) and its wholesomeness (which tends to get overemphasized). What I’d like to do here is first reproduce the essay in its entirety, and then in a brand-new section talk about what, if anything, has changed since I wrote it, while also expanding on some points I only briefly touched on.

To begin with, a quick refresher on what Opportunity is about:

With two young children, a full-time job, two student loans, and rent due every month, it’s no wonder that millennial single mother Jacqueline is struggling! She’s exhausted, she’s stressed, she’s overworked, and worse: she hasn’t gotten laid in over two years! But things begin to change after she reconnects with an old friend, who makes her a surprising offer…

Opportunity: A Sugar Baby Story is a warm, lighthearted erotic visual novel exploring what it means to rebuild and reinvent yourself against a backdrop of late-stage capitalism. What do you do when you realize you haven’t been really happy for a long time, and what does it mean to be REALLY happy, anyways?

Continue reading “Opportunity and the Bona Fides of Queerness & Coziness (Expanded)”

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This is sixth of nine essays contained within the first issue of the Adult Analysis Anthology, an experimental collection of longform writing that seeks to expand the breadth of critical discourse around adult games and adult game culture. I will be re-publishing the web versions of all essays from the first two issues of the anthology to this blog over the course of the next few months, but if you’d like to support the creation of more high-quality writing about adult games the full anthology is available for purchase on Itch! Anthology logo by Pillow!

Written By: Callisto Jupiter-Four

None of my favorite erotic games are really queer. Most of them have girls fucking each other. Some of them have trans people. But none of them actually talk about queer experiences or depict queer life. At best, they’re a sort of generic chose-your-own-gender Everyone Is Bi procgen fuckscape. Usually, they’re male-centric, male-dominant narratives where trans people don’t exist and women only fuck each other to appeal to a male audience. A lot of the games I’ve spent hours jerking off to express a worldview that is roundly misogynistic in a way I struggle to square with my enjoyment of them as a queer woman.

There’s erotic games that are explicitly queer. There’s Hardcoded. There’s a solid majority of itch.io VNs. People on Twitter keep telling me to read Coquette Dragoon. I know these games exist; I have played several of them. And yet somehow I did not like them. I don’t intend to put any of them in particular on trial, here, because I think the devs still deserve to have more money, but I have played them and they haven’t done it for me.

Continue reading “Queer Porn Games Just Don’t Do It For Me”