-eng- Rural Homecoming 2- Shiori !!exclusive!!

Includes the protagonist's uncle and various local "DQN" characters who drive the game's NTR plotline. Gameplay Features Art Style:

, works as an office employee. The household dynamic changes when Kyou's uncle,

A small crisis arrived, as it always does anywhere people are connected. The river—normally polite and predictable—eroded the riverbank near the old bridge after a fierce rain. Townsfolk convened at the community hall, voices low with practicality. Planning, repairing, decisions made with a kind of democratic choreography: who could drive heavy tools, who could cook for the workers, who could watch over the children. Shiori found herself organizing the younger volunteers. It was the sort of leadership you learn in the city, transplanted into mud and shared chopsticks. They worked until sunset, hands raw and stubborn, then repaired with cold tea and laughter. The bridge would hold; people would keep the town threaded together. -ENG- Rural Homecoming 2- Shiori

: The central heroine. Visually distinguished by shoulder-length black hair tied in a ponytail and a distinct physical design. She is initially a dutiful housewife who grows increasingly influenced by the new household dynamic.

The live-in relative who disrupts the household's boundaries. Blond hair, goatee, muscular build. Includes the protagonist's uncle and various local "DQN"

Shiori’s return to her childhood home isn't a victory lap; it’s a quiet retreat. After years of the neon-lit grind in the city, the silence of the rural fields is deafening. : The smell of damp earth and woodsmoke.

Upon her return, Shiori is met with a mixture of emotions. Her family, though welcoming, is struggling to come to terms with their own past and present. Her relationships with old friends are rekindled, but also complicated by the changes time has brought. As Shiori navigates this complex web of emotions, she begins to confront the choices she made in the past and the person she wants to become. Shiori found herself organizing the younger volunteers

Her narrative explores the feelings of those who stayed in the hometown while others chased dreams in the city.

Includes the protagonist's uncle and various local "DQN" characters who drive the game's NTR plotline. Gameplay Features Art Style:

, works as an office employee. The household dynamic changes when Kyou's uncle,

A small crisis arrived, as it always does anywhere people are connected. The river—normally polite and predictable—eroded the riverbank near the old bridge after a fierce rain. Townsfolk convened at the community hall, voices low with practicality. Planning, repairing, decisions made with a kind of democratic choreography: who could drive heavy tools, who could cook for the workers, who could watch over the children. Shiori found herself organizing the younger volunteers. It was the sort of leadership you learn in the city, transplanted into mud and shared chopsticks. They worked until sunset, hands raw and stubborn, then repaired with cold tea and laughter. The bridge would hold; people would keep the town threaded together.

: The central heroine. Visually distinguished by shoulder-length black hair tied in a ponytail and a distinct physical design. She is initially a dutiful housewife who grows increasingly influenced by the new household dynamic.

The live-in relative who disrupts the household's boundaries. Blond hair, goatee, muscular build.

Shiori’s return to her childhood home isn't a victory lap; it’s a quiet retreat. After years of the neon-lit grind in the city, the silence of the rural fields is deafening. : The smell of damp earth and woodsmoke.

Upon her return, Shiori is met with a mixture of emotions. Her family, though welcoming, is struggling to come to terms with their own past and present. Her relationships with old friends are rekindled, but also complicated by the changes time has brought. As Shiori navigates this complex web of emotions, she begins to confront the choices she made in the past and the person she wants to become.

Her narrative explores the feelings of those who stayed in the hometown while others chased dreams in the city.