Compare Love n Dream: Virtual Happiness prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Secret Labo. Published by Secret Labo. Released on 12/19/2020. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie.

A bite-sized card-dungeon for anime fans who want something low-stakes and mildly lewd to click through in an afternoon - know what you are signing up for and it delivers exactly that.

I went in with calibrated expectations, and that probably saved me. Secret Labo occupies a very specific corner of the indie market: small, modestly priced, anime-adjacent titles that do not pretend to be anything grander than they are. Virtual Happiness sits comfortably in that tradition - a sequel that quietly adds a thin RPG layer over the card-puzzle skeleton of the original Love n Dream. The core loop is simple drag-and-drop interaction. You pull your character card onto environment cards to resolve encounters, manage hit points, and push through stage after stage of dungeon-flavored rooms. The RPG components are real but light - character stats grow around HP, and each girl carries special abilities that occasionally reshape how you approach a tough room. There are multiple card types representing different choice paths, and collectible items scattered through stages that flesh out each character a little. A gallery and character viewer round things out for the audience this game is clearly built for. The whole thing runs between one and two hours for most players, with some grinding extending that modestly if you care about completion. What works here is the honesty of the package. The artwork is clean 2D anime with distinct character designs, each girl voiced with a different personality. The pacing of stage progression is forgiving enough to feel relaxing rather than punishing, though player feedback notes the difficulty spikes in early rooms can feel arbitrary - one moment you have health to spare, and the next a random encounter flips the result against you with little warning. The card resolution can feel opaque, and players who want transparent probability or deep deck construction will find nothing for them here. The 18-plus content is locked behind a separate DLC, so the base game is tame enough for the Steam storefront. That structure is worth knowing before you buy. The community sentiment sits at a modest mostly-positive range, which tracks: the audience that shops for this type of title tends to be tolerant of rough edges as long as the characters land. The characters are likeable enough. The localization into English is functional rather than polished. Virtual Happiness is not trying to be Slay the Spire. It is a short, undemanding session toy - the kind of thing Secret Labo makes with a clear sense of who is going to buy it. If you are in that audience, the low price of entry and the unpretentious two-hour runtime make it easy to recommend as a filler purchase. If you are hoping the RPG card-battler tags imply something with build depth or replayability, redirect your attention elsewhere. Kai, Scout Team

Love n Dream: Virtual Happiness
CasualIndie

Love n Dream: Virtual Happiness

Dec 19, 2020Secret Labo
GamerScout Says

A bite-sized card-dungeon for anime fans who want something low-stakes and mildly lewd to click through in an afternoon - know what you are signing up for and it delivers exactly that.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Love n Dream: Virtual Happiness

I went in with calibrated expectations, and that probably saved me. Secret Labo occupies a very specific corner of the indie market: small, modestly priced, anime-adjacent titles that do not pretend to be anything grander than they are. Virtual Happiness sits comfortably in that tradition - a sequel that quietly adds a thin RPG layer over the card-puzzle skeleton of the original Love n Dream. The core loop is simple drag-and-drop interaction. You pull your character card onto environment cards to resolve encounters, manage hit points, and push through stage after stage of dungeon-flavored rooms. The RPG components are real but light - character stats grow around HP, and each girl carries special abilities that occasionally reshape how you approach a tough room. There are multiple card types representing different choice paths, and collectible items scattered through stages that flesh out each character a little. A gallery and character viewer round things out for the audience this game is clearly built for. The whole thing runs between one and two hours for most players, with some grinding extending that modestly if you care about completion. What works here is the honesty of the package. The artwork is clean 2D anime with distinct character designs, each girl voiced with a different personality. The pacing of stage progression is forgiving enough to feel relaxing rather than punishing, though player feedback notes the difficulty spikes in early rooms can feel arbitrary - one moment you have health to spare, and the next a random encounter flips the result against you with little warning. The card resolution can feel opaque, and players who want transparent probability or deep deck construction will find nothing for them here. The 18-plus content is locked behind a separate DLC, so the base game is tame enough for the Steam storefront. That structure is worth knowing before you buy. The community sentiment sits at a modest mostly-positive range, which tracks: the audience that shops for this type of title tends to be tolerant of rough edges as long as the characters land. The characters are likeable enough. The localization into English is functional rather than polished. Virtual Happiness is not trying to be Slay the Spire. It is a short, undemanding session toy - the kind of thing Secret Labo makes with a clear sense of who is going to buy it. If you are in that audience, the low price of entry and the unpretentious two-hour runtime make it easy to recommend as a filler purchase. If you are hoping the RPG card-battler tags imply something with build depth or replayability, redirect your attention elsewhere. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:sub-5Anime Card PuzzlerDrag-and-Drop CombatCharacter CollectorGallery UnlockShort SessionR18 DLC OptionalStat Progression

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 8 / 8.1 / 10
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
Geforce GT 610 (1024 MB) or equivalent
Processor
Intel Pentium D 830 (2 * 3000) or equivalent

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Secret Labo
Publisher
Secret Labo
Release Date
Dec 19, 2020

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