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Lessons in Love

Lessons in Love

Developer: Selebus Version: 0.46.0

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Lessons in Love review

How the longest visual novel ever made changed my perspective on adult dating sims

I only read 5% of Lessons in Love, the porn game that is the longest visual novel ever made, and it ruined my life. This adult dating sim isn’t just another game; it’s an ongoing experience about 20 students trying to make their way through life while you take over as their teacher. The gameplay loop is simple yet addictive: wake up, choose locations to visit, encounter a girl, and increase affection points. But beneath this surface lies a twisted world of fictional religious systems and endless trial and error that left me questioning everything. Let me share how this incredible game changed my view on adult visual novels.

Why Lessons in Love Is the Most Twisted Adult Visual Novel Ever Made

How the Gameplay Loop of Lessons in Love Keeps You Hooked

Let me paint the scene: you wake up as the protagonist, Sensei, in a seemingly normal Japanese school. You pick a location on the map—maybe the classroom, the rooftop, or the dormitory. You encounter one of the 20 distinct students, each with her own personality and secrets. You engage in dialogue, make a choice, and watch as tiny increments of progress appear. This is the core loop of Lessons in Love, and it is deceptively simple.

Here’s the catch: that simplicity is a trap. What starts as a gentle routine quickly spirals into an obsession. The game is built on the foundation of an adult dating sim, but it refuses to let you coast. Every morning, you must decide where to go, who to talk to, and what to say. The results are often unpredictable. You might spend a week trying to increase affection points with a girl named Yumi, only to discover that a single missed conversation on a Tuesday locks you out of her entire storyline for the rest of the run.

Personal Note: I remember sitting at my desk at 3 AM, refreshing a walkthrough while muttering, “Just one more day.” That was 200 hours ago. Reading just 5% of this longest visual novel ever made genuinely wrecked my sleep schedule.

The genius lies in how the loop escalates. Early on, you feel like a master of the game. You wake up, pick a spot, gain a heart icon, and move on. But after 50 hours, you realize the game has been tracking your tiniest failures. Missed a festival event? That character is now “blocked” for the next 30 in-game days. The adult dating sim genre usually rewards patience with instant gratification. Here, it rewards patience with more puzzles.

To illustrate the madness, consider this breakdown of the simple steps versus the complex outcomes they produce:

Simple Step (What You Do) Complex Outcome (What Actually Happens)
Click on a location Triggers a hidden flag that only activates 10 days later
Choose a dialogue option Locks or unlocks a different character’s route entirely
Give a gift Increases affection by 1, but decreases trust with another student
Skip a day Misses a critical cutscene that never repeats

This is not a game you play. This is a game that consumes you. The more you invest, the more tangled the web becomes. And that is precisely why it is so addictive.

The Twisted Religious Systems in Lessons in Love That Shocked Me

I grew up in a religious household. I know the hymns, the prayers, and the guilt. So when I first encountered the fictional religious systems woven into this adult dating sim, I expected a parody. What I got was a mirror held up to faith itself, warped by the game’s horrific, taboo lens.

The game introduces a belief structure centered around a being called “The Eye,” which is reminiscent of an all-seeing deity. But unlike the Christian tradition of a loving, forgiving God, this entity is hungry. The characters—students who are supposed to be ordinary teenagers—begin to worship this force through rituals that are equal parts absurd and disturbing. They sing hymns about emptiness and offer “sacrifices” in the form of memories.

I remember one specific scene where a character, Ayane, leads a prayer circle. She speaks in soft, melodic tones about “giving your pain to The Eye.” It felt so familiar—the language of surrender, of release—yet it was twisted into something deeply unsettling. The fictional religious systems in this game don’t just borrow from religion; they invert it. Where Christianity promises salvation, this system promises oblivion. Where faith traditionally brings community, this game uses it to isolate the characters further.

The shock value here is not gratuitous. It serves as a narrative tool. The game asks: What if your deepest, most sacred beliefs were turned into a tool for manipulation? It dares to explore the idea that even our most sincere devotion can be corrupted. For me, this was the hardest part to digest. I could handle the explicit content. But watching a character pray to a god that clearly doesn’t love them back? That hit differently.

Why Increasing Affection Points in Lessons in Love Is So Frustrating

If you are a completionist, this section is your warning. Increase affection points in any other game, and you usually get a cutscene, a new outfit, or a simple “thank you.” Not in Lessons in Love. Here, increasing affection points is an art form of endless trial and error.

The system is intentionally opaque. You cannot see the exact number of points you have. The only feedback you get is a slight change in a character’s dialogue, a new blush, or—occasionally—a completely new location opening up. But the real kicker? The affection cap is a moving target. Once you hit a certain threshold, the game demands you meet a second requirement, often something absurd like “have visited the pool 15 times on rainy days” or “talked to a character who is not currently present.”

I spent an entire weekend trying to trigger next events for a character named Noriko. I followed every guide, clicked every spot, and reloaded my save file over 200 times. Nothing worked. I was in a loop of endless trial and error, waking up my character, going to the same three locations, and failing. It was ruining my life—not metaphorically. I was skipping meals, ignoring friends, and losing sleep over a pixelated girl’s affection.

But here is the truth: that frustration is the point. The game forces you to earn every piece of its story. It respects your time by demanding it. When you finally trigger next events after hours of struggle, the payoff is immense. You realize you are not just playing a game; you are surviving a test of commitment.

The longest visual novel ever made does not apologize for its difficulty. It expects you to break. And if you don’t break? You get to see the most profound, heartbreaking, and beautifully written narrative about love, loss, and obsession that the adult dating sim genre has ever produced.

So, yes, this game ruined my life. And I cannot recommend it enough. If you have the patience for endless trial and error, if you are willing to wrestle with fictional religious systems that question your core beliefs, and if you are ready to increase affection points one painful click at a time, then welcome to the madness. The Lessons in Love porn game is waiting for you. 😈

Lessons in Love is not just another porn game; it’s the longest visual novel ever made that completely changed my perspective on adult dating sims. The simple gameplay loop of waking up, choosing locations, and increasing affection points leads to complex outcomes involving twisted religious systems and endless trial and error. Even reading just 5% of this incredible game ruined my life in unexpected ways. If you’re looking for an ongoing adult dating sim about 20 students with a teacher protagonist, this highly recommended game offers a unique experience that will challenge your patience and reward your persistence. Don’t let the frustration of triggering the next events discourage you from experiencing this twisted masterpiece.

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