
but I can't say I'm that fussed about her. I noticed that the dev mentioned Bella is the main girl (fair given the title) when I was lurking in the thread waiting for the patch. I wish you good fortune.įor a while I've been remembering the scene with the ex-gf where you encourage her to get drunk and do drugs and party with the swingers, but I couldn't for the life of me remember what game it was. That's fine, but it seems like it would work better if it was the 'evil' route rather than choosing a D/s relationship (expressed as 'Alpha/Chad' in thoughts and sub role for the woman), which isn't necessarily exploitative (though that seems to be the theme presented often herein). Not everyone can pull off mad ping-pong volleyball or wants to page-back to win at the fight scene with the most cheesy 'eevvil racist' over a cigarette brand confusion, haha.Īlong those lines, I noticed a lot of passive aggressive text when choosing the 'dominant' option As if the dev was wanting us to feel guilty. I found the mini-games to be reasonable in difficulty but if you have an option for us to skip them (which is smart since most of us don't enjoy mini-games), we should auto-win, not auto-lose. I get it, creators live out their fantasies in their stories but damn that was so painfully corny and unbelievable. One thing that made me laugh and just took me right out of the story was the 'punch a nazi' stuff at the quick-e-mart. Good aesthetics (sans MC, I wish I didn't see him - he doesn't look like he can magic-pull this much poon by breathing, sorry). “Convenience stores must compete fiercely with other retail channels which are also growing dramatically, especially online shopping,” said Dinh Thi My Loan, head of the Association of Vietnam Retailers.Fun and diverse lady options. Its poll showed a fifth of Vietnamese now used convenience stores often, although fresh markets remained the preferred channel with 62 percent of shoppers using them.īroader expansion of the middle class and retail, however, means mini-marts face plenty of competition. The mini-mart boom sharply contrasts with that of Vietnam’s supermarkets, which expanded around 3 percent to 313 stores in 2014 from 304 in 2012, according to market research firm Nielsen. Japan’s FamilyMart said it aims to increase its Vietnam stores to more than 100 in 2016, citing customer growth of 120 percent annually. In July, 7-Eleven, which has 8,469 outlets in Thailand and 1,407 in the Philippines, signed a master franchise agreement with Seven System Vietnam to develop and operate 7-Eleven stores. Vietnamese conglomerate Vingroup, which has opened 93 Vinmart stores since the end of last year, recently said it would double its 2016 target to 2,000 outlets. Here it is less than 10 percent,” said CBRE Vietnam Executive Director Richard Leech. In other countries, convenience stores are about 20 percent of market. Market watchers say Vietnamese consumers are increasingly willing to pay a little more for the convenience of mini-marts, which open for longer hours and are found in more and more locations.


GRAPHIC: Convenience stores: /kyc85wĬonvenience store numbers have jumped more than 260 percent since 2012, with at least 533 up and running by the end of last month, according to data from the companies.
