<img src="https://sb.scorecardresearch.com/p/?c1=2&amp;c2=10055482&amp;cv=4.4.0&amp;cj=1"> Skip to main content
PC Gamer PC Gamer THE GLOBAL AUTHORITY ON PC GAMES
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
flag of UK
UK
flag of US
US
flag of Canada
Canada
flag of Australia
Australia
  • Games
  • Hardware
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Video
  • Forum
  • More
    • PC Gaming Show
    • Software
    • Movies & TV
    • Coupons
    • Magazine
    • Newsletter
    • Community guidelines
    • links
    • Meet the team
    • About PC Gamer
PC Gamer Magazine Subscription
PC Gamer Magazine Subscription
Why subscribe?
  • Subscribe to the world's #1 PC gaming mag
  • Try a single issue or save on a subscription
  • Issues delivered straight to your door or device
From$32.49
View
Popular
  • Memorial Day Deals
  • Computex 2025
  • TES4: Oblivion
  • Elden Ring: Nightreign
  • GTA 6

Recommended reading

A vampire holds an ace of hearts
Games The best sex games on PC that aren't garbage
Celestia Ludenberg in her gothic lolita outfit
Games The best anime games on PC
The key art for The Hundred Line - Last Defense Academy
RPG This game has 100 endings, and it's pushing the creators to the brink of bankruptcy
Chillet, from Palworld, in a visual novel getting headpats.
Survival & Crafting Palworld decides it wasn't April fooling after all, is actually making a visual novel dating sim where you can, uh, 'dismember and eat' some of its cast
The titular Kaname Date, presumably about to have a very long day of sleuthing
Adventure No Sleep For Kaname Date will have us dreaming of AI: The Somnium Files' deranged detective again this July
It&#039;s ENA! From the free adventure Dream BBQ!
Adventure Mindbending free multimedia adventure ENA: Dream BBQ is out now, has activated all my neurons and opened my third eye
Metaphor: ReFantazio character art
RPG Metaphor: ReFantazio did surprisingly well on PC, says director, and that the number of desktop-based JRPG enjoyers is on the rise: 'The trend is evident'
  1. Games
  2. Visual Novel
  3. Analogue: A Hate Story

The best visual novels for beginners

Features
By Jenni Lada published 9 February 2015

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an commission. Here’s how it works.

The writing is on the screen. Visual novels aren't Japan-exclusives anymore. Sekai Project's Kickstarter projects for CLANNAD and Grisaia Trilogy have respectively raised $541,161 and $475,255. Companies like JAST and MangaGamer are extending their range of products beyond eroge, “adult” games. The niche genre has invaded our PCs, and people are rallying behind English translations and indie originals.

I'd like to think it's the Choose Your Own Adventure generation propelling them to success, but that would be selling these adventures short. The demand and appreciation are there because the creators have engaging stories to tell, and this is a unique means of conveying those stories.

However, getting into visual novels can be daunting. The "gameplay," or lack thereof, can throw newcomers for a loop. It's better to ease into the genre, and it's much easier to try something new when you can find it on Steam, perhaps even during a sale at a drastically reduced price. Prepare to expand your horizons! Add these titles to your Steam wishlist and, one day, let them tell you a story.

Page 1 of 10
Page 1 of 10
Cherry Tree High Comedy Club

Cherry Tree High Comedy Club

One of the biggest barriers of entry with visual novels is getting used to the fact that you're going to be spending hours in front of a computer staring at character portraits while reading text. Cherry Tree High Comedy Club is more of a hybrid—part simulation game, part visual novel—which allows you to be a little more proactive when it comes to helping your character, Mairu, recruit people to her high school's comedy club to keep it from being disbanded. The ability to choose between a de-Westernized and Westernized localization—either a more direct translation or one that takes Western culture into , respectively—is another way publisher Nyu Media has extended a friendly hand to invite players unfamiliar with the genre to try developer 773's game.

Page 2 of 10
Page 2 of 10
Dandelion - Wishes Brought to You -

Dandelion - Wishes Brought to You -

Visual novels can be considered the cousin twice removed to anime. You're watching and reading a story, but occasionally decisions allow you to alter its course. By that reasoning, Dandelion - Wishes Brought to You - is the best way to welcome anyone with a fondness for shoujo into the fold. The plot’s similarities to the popular anime Fruits Basket—a young woman gets the chance to bond with once-gorgeous men who have been turned into cats and rabbits as part of a "game"—makes it a welcoming choice for current shouju anime fans. Unfortunately, the English translation could have been better, as there is some awkward phrasing and grammatical issues. Given this is a game from an independent, Korean developer, some mistakes are understandable.

Page 3 of 10
Page 3 of 10
Long Live the Queen

Long Live the Queen

Before we get into the more traditional visual novels, there's one more hybrid that's a challenging, high quality adventure. For those new to the genre, Long Live the Queen will help you get used to the idea of having to read walls of text. The story offers you the opportunity to shape a young princess' life, in the hopes of helping her live to her coronation day. No easy task, given everyone else has their own agenda and tend to want her dead. There are plenty of choices to be made, and planning out her schedule with classes in things like diplomacy and music might round out her repertoire enough to keep her alive. Think of it as a crash course in “paying attention” to prepare you for more traditional visual novels.

Page 4 of 10
Page 4 of 10
Hatoful Boyfriend

Hatoful Boyfriend

Hatoful Boyfriend is the game for people who have no interest in visual novels. It eases you into the genre with the most ridiculous premise ever. In a post apocalyptic world devastated by the H1N5 bird flu, a young woman living in a cave goes to school and falls in love with birds. The game is hilarious on the surface, but those who spend enough time with it can unlock and experience the much darker Hurtful Boyfriend. Love and death, hilarity and tragedy, Hatoful Boyfriend has it all, while making fun of itself enough to let you know its in on the joke.

Page 5 of 10
Page 5 of 10
If My Heart Had Wings

If My Heart Had Wings

Many visual novels also have romantic elements, with specific endings being tied to relationships growing between the player's avatar and other characters appearing in the story. If My Heart Had Wings is a slice-of-life kind of game, following a young man named Aoi who's returned to his hometown to attend a technical school after a car accident. There, he bonds with his fellow students in the Soaring Club as they attempt to build a glider. Childhood dreams come true, love blooms, and some characters might just find a happy end.

Page 6 of 10
Page 6 of 10
Cinders

Cinders

Presenting people with familiar stories and appealing art are two fantastic ways to coax newcomers into curling up with a visual novel. MoaCube did just that with Cinders, its retelling of the classic Cinderella tale. Except this time, if you were dissatisfied with Cinderella's willingness to acquiesce to others' expectations, you can take charge and see what happens when she pursues other routes to freedom. With many twists, even the more conventional possibilities may not be as straightforward as they seem.

Page 7 of 10
Page 7 of 10
Analogue: A Hate Story

Analogue: A Hate Story

Once you are used to the idea of dealing with walls of text, it's the perfect time to get into Analogue: A Hate Story. Christine Love's tragic story is steeped in South Korean historical conventions. Fans of historical fiction will feel like an archeologist, sifting through ancient texts in an attempt to discover the truth behind the Mugunghwa, a rogue, abandoned spaceship. Along the way, there's also an opportunity to bond with the two remaining AIs on the ship.

Page 8 of 10
Page 8 of 10
fault milestone one

fault milestone one

We've gone through both visual novel hybrids and more traditional stories, but there's a one more type to consider. Some developers have created something called kinetic novels. These seek only to tell a tale, with players giving up all control and enjoying the ride. Think of them as being to visual novels what games like Gone Home and Verde Station are to adventure games. You’re exploring a world and experiencing things as an observer. With fault milestone one, players enjoy a story based on a doujinshi—an original, Japanese, indie comic. A princess and her bodyguard are trying to get home to Rughzenhaide, and players can sit back and follow their journey.

Page 9 of 10
Page 9 of 10
WORLD END ECONOMiCA episode.01

WORLD END ECONOMiCA episode.01

Finally, we come to Isuna Hasekura's WORLD END ECONOMiCA. I'm excited to recommend it, since it's my favorite kinetic visual novel and comes from a respected storyteller. You follow a young man named Haru, desperate to explore the unknown and willing to do whatever it takes to earn enough seed money to do so. That goal can be quite difficult to achieve, and players will find a story that is heartwarming, dramatic, funny, and even tragic. While there’s no direct influence over the course of Haru’s journey, it evokes the same kinds of emotions and feelings as more traditional gameplay experiences do, transporting the player to another world.

Page 10 of 10
Page 10 of 10
Jenni Lada
Read more
A vampire holds an ace of hearts
The best sex games on PC that aren't garbage
Celestia Ludenberg in her gothic lolita outfit
The best anime games on PC
The key art for The Hundred Line - Last Defense Academy
This game has 100 endings, and it's pushing the creators to the brink of bankruptcy
Chillet, from Palworld, in a visual novel getting headpats.
Palworld decides it wasn't April fooling after all, is actually making a visual novel dating sim where you can, uh, 'dismember and eat' some of its cast
The titular Kaname Date, presumably about to have a very long day of sleuthing
No Sleep For Kaname Date will have us dreaming of AI: The Somnium Files' deranged detective again this July
It&#039;s ENA! From the free adventure Dream BBQ!
Mindbending free multimedia adventure ENA: Dream BBQ is out now, has activated all my neurons and opened my third eye
Latest in Visual Novel
Promise Mascot Agency art
Promise Mascot Agency review: Absurdist management sim shows the makers of Paradise Killer are in the business of success
An ominous man holds his finger over a book, eyes closed, while an eye floats above a pyramid behind him.
If you've ever wished Phoenix Wright was a witcher then do I have the game for you
National Park Girls visual novel
A yuri VN about national parks that turn into anime girls is, somehow, the most relatable game I've played in my 20s
A headshot of Akari, your virtual girlfriend.
My date with an 'adorable girl who forgives all your awkwardness' went wrong when I realised I was trapped in digital hell
Three figures, one uniformed, one wearing a suit, and one wearing a Soviet-style suit, stand smugly with their hands on their hips.
A War Of A Man's Making is a quietly brilliant, totally free political sim where you have to try to survive as a deranged dictator's henchman
Pro Philosopher 2 debate visual novel
Pro Philosopher 2 is Ace Attorney for our stupid election season, and it really did make me feel better
Latest in Features
A 3D printed custom PC case build fashioned to look like a triumphantly-posed Palico from Capcom&#039;s Monster Hunter series. It has a long sword strapped to its backpack. A GPU features prominently in the sword&#039;s hilt. This was photographed on the show floor at Computex 2025.
Computex 2025 made me realise I have no time for extravagant PC parts, just give me a simple, solid design and function
Oblivion Umbra NPC close up
The best videogame RPGs are really tabletop RPGs in disguise—and that might just be their secret sauce
A screenshot from Two Strikes showing two sword-bearing men in combat
Five new Steam games you probably missed (May 26, 2025)
the finals and Splitgate 2
Stop messing with team deathmatch
Leif Johnson smiling at the camera
ing Leif Johnson, the gaming industry's one and only cowboy poet
The famous YOU&#039;RE WINNER screen.
One of the worst games of all time got a Steam release, but is it even that bad compared to our current hell of asset-flips and Steam shovelware?
  1. Annapro carrying case, GameSir Nova Lite controller, SteelSeries Arctis GameBuds, and Asus ROG Falchion RX Low Profile keyboard on a blue background with PC Gamer Recommended logo
    1
    Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads
  2. 2
    Best graphics card for laptops in 2025: the mobile GPUs I'd want in my next gaming laptop
  3. 3
    Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most
  4. 4
    Best 14-inch gaming laptop in 2025: The top compact gaming laptops I've held in these hands
  5. 5
    Best Mini-ITX motherboards in 2025: My pick from all the mini mobo marvels I've tested
  1. A driver helps another out of a car.
    1
    F1 25 review: Commendable upgrades, but this is fundamentally the same game as before
  2. 2
    NZXT H3 Flow case review
  3. 3
    Hisense C2 Ultra projector review
  4. 4
    JDM: Japanese Drift Master review – The most ambitious driving game in years, but that ambition sometimes gets the better of it
  5. 5
    Monster Train 2 review: Roguelike deckbuilder heaven, and a worthy challenger to Slay the Spire and Balatro

PC Gamer is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • Future's experts
  • and conditions
  • Cookies policy
  • with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please or to comment

Please wait...