
Rising Bliss
More by Studio Mystic
About Rising Bliss
Experience a sexual apocalypse like no other with the complete edition of Rising Bliss. The game boasts nearly 4000 images and has 163 animations for you to enjoy. Clear your weekend, because this isn’t a game you can complete in a few hours. The story takes place in modern-day Japan and follows a young man in his final year at Kaori Academy as disturbing events begin to unravel. The Japanese government, faced with declining birth rates, are completely unable to support important social programs for the elderly, pay for their military budget, or provide critical infrastructure funding due to this ongoing crisis. In response, Prime Minister Tachi develops a powerful aphrodisiac and begins releasing it into the water supply. Overcome with lust, the general population begins to lower their barriers to sex and quickly loosen their morals. As the citizens are distracted with mindless mating, the Minister moves to consolidate his power with the ultimate goal of ruling a sex empire for life. However, things don’t go to plan when infected begin overrunning the metropolitan capital of Tokyo. Lust zombies are everywhere and the protagonist must do everything in his power to escape the city with his classmates.
Confused about how the downloading works? Here is a handy guide
- Extract and run.
The ending has been rewritten so it makes more sense and doesn’t feel so rushed. Extra renders were added where neccessary and one final proofread has been done. There are now 3794 images and 163 animations in the game.
Minimum
OS: Windows 7+ / macOS 10.10+ / Linux
CPU: Dual Core 1.5 GHz
RAM: 2 GB
GPU: Integrated Graphics
Storage: 2.64 GB
Recommended
OS: Windows 10+ / macOS 12+ / Linux
CPU: Dual Core 2.0 GHz
RAM: 4 GB
GPU: Any dedicated GPU
Storage: 2.64 GB


can anyone suggest a good game with a simular idea/storyline?
The game is updated to latest version.
It is good game but too short!!
Good.. but short after 2 years = NOT GOOD
Calling this a game is rather generous… It’s a visual novel, your “choices” have no effect on the “play”