You Had a Good Time Last Night Review — Guarding a Princess from Desire and Darkness
This You Had a Good Time Last Night review breaks down FallingDay’s fantasy NTR exploration RPG. Specifically, the game earned a 4.38 rating across 412 reviews and moved 2,648 copies. It stands out as one of the stronger NTR titles in its price range. However, after the Demon King’s defeat, a creeping corruption targets the elf princess you swore to protect. That said, the puzzle-solving gameplay holds its own well beyond the H-content. Here’s whether this title deserves your money.
Gameplay: What Makes It Unique
You Had a Good Time Last Night drops combat entirely in favor of exploration-based puzzle-solving. Players take on the role of the princess’s guardian, investigating threats in a post-Demon King fantasy world. Still, each area combines exploration with puzzles that keep the gameplay loop engaging throughout. Specifically, the game revolves around navigating the town, talking to faction members, and solving puzzles tied to each chapter’s progression.
A multi-ending system branches based on decisions made at critical moments. The game prompts you to save before each major split, a thoughtful quality-of-life touch. However, the action taken right before a branch point matters just as much as the choice itself. Frequent manual saves are essential since one misstep can lock the princess and her cat-eared companion into a specific corruption path.
The minigames scattered throughout feel polished rather than tacked on as filler. In fact, fallingDay clearly invested effort into making each one genuinely fun to play. Still, the story casually fleshes out the town’s factions and each character’s motives through its narrative. This world-building gives the elf princess’s gradual corruption real narrative weight.
Hints appear at key progression points, so players rarely hit a wall. Of course, the pacing stays smooth across this exploration RPG experience. For example, the 4.38 rating from 412 reviews reflects a game where puzzle design carries the entire runtime without needing a single battle. For an NTR title built on fantasy and corruption themes. That commitment to exploration-only gameplay is a bold and rewarding choice.
What Makes It Fappable
The game dedicates every single CG exclusively to NTR. Of course, in other words, there are no vanilla scenes splitting the focus. Instead, the exploration-based RPG builds tension through puzzle-solving between each corruption sequence. Beyond that, the game earned a 4.38 rating across 412 reviews.
The elf princess and your cat-eared companion anchor every corruption scenario. Specifically, their fall from innocence unfolds across a multi-ending branching system. Saving before key decision points lets you explore each dark path. Yet, this branching structure makes the game worth replaying for every outcome.
Gangbang scenes escalate the stakes within this post-Demon King fantasy world. Meanwhile, the corrupted morals play out through conspiracies that slowly manipulate each character’s loyalties. Pantsu’s illustrations sell every emotional beat with expressive art. Yet, each princess corruption sequence builds naturally from the scenario Red Thursday crafted around it.
The puzzle-solving gameplay genuinely holds up on its own merits. For example, players praised the minigames for feeling like real mechanics rather than filler. Still, the game drops hints at critical moments and prompts saves before branches. For an NTR fantasy, this title rewards thorough exploration across every route.
Characters & Art
Pantsu’s illustrations give You Had a Good Time Last Night, Didn’t You? a polished fantasy aesthetic. In particular, the character designs draw on classic archetypes — a princess, elves, and a cat-eared companion. However, each one carries enough visual personality to stand apart. Pantsu keeps the art consistent across every branching path and scene variation.
Every CG in the game commits fully to its NTR premise. Notably, there are no filler illustrations or generic battle screens here. Instead, each piece ties directly to a corruption scenario involving the princess or her companion. This all-in approach gives the visual storytelling a focused intensity that casual NTR titles rarely match.
The elf and fantasy designs complement the game’s world without feeling generic. Specifically, faction members and townspeople get distinct looks that reflect their roles in the plot. Still, in contrast, the cat-eared companion’s lighter aesthetic contrasts sharply with the darker corruption CGs. That visual gap makes the tonal shifts hit harder as the story escalates.
Scene branches include save prompts, so players can revisit key CGs without replaying entire chapters. For a mid-priced fantasy RPG with a 4.38 rating across 412 reviews, the art punches above its weight. The key moments land effectively because Pantsu matches each scene’s intensity to the narrative stakes. Yet, in summary, the visual quality stays strong from the first exploration sequence through every ending.
Story (Spoiler-Free)
The premise of You Had a Good Time Last Night, Didn’t You? hooks you immediately. Essentially, the Demon King is already dead, and the kingdom should be safe. Yet, instead, a new threat creeps in during peacetime, targeting the elf princess through plots and temptation. Of course, this post-war vulnerability makes the NTR hit harder than a standard fantasy setup.
Red Thursday’s scenario structures the story around exploration and puzzle-solving rather than combat. You spend your time investigating the town and uncovering who threatens the princess. Still, on another note, the game drops hints at key moments to guide your progress without hand-holding. Yet, each discovery pulls you deeper into the web of corruption spreading through the kingdom.
A multi-ending system branches based on your actions before critical story moments. In particular, frequent saving matters here because seemingly minor choices determine the princess’s fate. For example, the game prompts you to save before major branches, signaling that consequences are real. Your role as her guardian carries genuine weight when every decision shapes whether she falls to darkness or reaches true happiness.
Beyond the main storyline, the world-building fleshes out local factions and their competing motives. This careful groundwork makes the fantasy setting feel lived-in rather than decorative. Your cat-eared companion adds another layer to the narrative stakes. In short, few NTR titles invest this much effort into making you care about a world before watching it unravel.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Fully committed NTR design — every CG and scene is dedicated to the cuckoldry theme with no half-measures, delivering exactly what the genre promises
- Polished puzzle-based gameplay — exploration and puzzle-solving mechanics are genuinely engaging rather than feeling like filler between H-scenes
- Thoughtful branching system — the game prompts you to save before key decision points and provides hints, making it easy to explore multiple endings
- Rich world-building — the town, factions, and character motives are fleshed out naturally, giving the NTR scenarios real emotional weight and context
- Compelling premise — the post-Demon-King setting where a new threat corrupts the princess creates genuine narrative tension beyond standard NTR setups
- Strong value for price — the amount of content, multiple endings, and gameplay depth offer solid satisfaction relative to the cost
Cons
- No voice acting — all dialogue is text-only, which means the emotional scenes rely entirely on writing and visuals to land
- No combat system — despite being labeled an RPG, the game is purely exploration and puzzles, which may disappoint players expecting traditional RPG battles
- Unclear branching triggers — some critical choices depend on actions taken before the obvious branch point, meaning players can lock themselves into routes without realizing it even with the save prompts
Customer Reviews
An exploration-based RPG with no combat. The CGs are exclusively NTR — a fully committed design choice.
The game flows smoothly for the most part. With a thoughtful design that gives you hints at key points and prompts you to save before scene branches. That said, sometimes the action right before a branching point can be critical, so frequent saving is recommended.
The minigames can be a bit of a stress factor. There’s a WASD quick-press section where one spot is extremely fast, and I failed it quite a few times. If you’re trying to clear with a low sexual harassment count, it’s a real bottleneck.
I’m mostly satisfied, but if I had to be greedy, I would’ve loved more scenes with Serena.
Once you reach any ending, the scene gallery unlocks. There’s also a full unlock option within the gallery. So those who just want to enjoy the scenes can rest easy.
— 大福丸 (5.0/5)
A story where, in a world after the Demon King has been defeated. The princess and your cat-eared companion get… done in.
This work got quite a bit of promotion and I think it generated a lot of buzz.
The gameplay is mainly puzzle-solving. I felt they didn’t cut any corners on the game mechanics either. This makes sure it’s genuinely fun to play as a game.
The game uses a multi-ending system where your choices determine which ending you get.
For a price of around 1,000 yen, the quality is outstanding. Highly recommend picking this one up.
Cat ears are the best.— 坂上田村麻呂 (5.0/5)
The premise of a new threat slowly creeping in *after* the hero has already saved the princess. That’s a great concept to start with.
Rather than sticking to a short NTR drama, the story casually fleshes out the town. The factions, and each character’s motives. This really brings the world to life. I liked that a lot.
It’s not a massive title in terms of volume, but considering the price, the satisfaction level is more than adequate.
It’s the kind of work that keeps you reading straight through at a brisk pace.
Looking forward to their next release.— detective (5.0/5)
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