You have two 3×3 grids, one for you and one for your opponent, and separating them is a 1×3 column that acts as neutral territory. Luckily, the actual card game that makes up the core of Monster Monpiece is a lot of fun. ![]() You do this by playing hours upon hours of card battles against mostly random people across a world map screen. Then May’s friend get’s turned Lost, and you have to save her. Fia is her opposite, cocky and impulsive, and helps make her a more confident character as their chemistry grows and they learn to balance one another. What does matter is the fun writing and quirky characters you meet on your journey, and if you have a love for anime you’ll feel right at home here.Īll you really have to know is you play May, who is shy and pretty much your “timid, low self-esteem” anime character embodied, and she gets paired up with the Monster girl Fia. The real truth is the world doesn’t really matter because the story in MM doesn’t really matter. Also they can become “Lost,” but I’m not really sure what that is, I just know they become exceptionally evil when they do. Monster girls have to live in cards or near Magus Quartz crystals or they lose strength otherwise. From what I gathered, monster girls coexist with people, and they “battle” one another just for the giggles. MM puts you in the world of Yafanir, where I honestly have no clue what is going on. If you answer the last question by exclaiming, “no, that sounds gross and dumb, and probably a little bit perverse,” then close your computer, go outside, and ignore everything else I have to say, because this game is most certainly not for you. ![]() ![]() Monster Monpiece poses a lot of pretty easy questions to the player: do you like anime? Do you like anime girls? Do you like card games? Do you like viciously rubbing pictures of girls on cards to make those cards better (and more naked)? If you answered yes to any of these questions, you may like Monster Monpiece.
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