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This game is definitely more punishing at the start than it should be, though after the first couple levels it becomes trivially easy. A fair number of community guides are simply for starting the game.

I haven't tried the sequel yet, so I couldn't say how it compares, but you definitely don't need to play this one first. As this is Mav's first game and that is his third game it should be significantly improved in many ways.

I don't need a guide for starting, I know exactly what I want to do. Problem is it's literally impossible if slaves are set to 100% male.

While not being able to exploit the instant completion of the first guild quest makes the start considerably more difficult, nothing critical to starting the game is dependent on the sex of slaves so besides being a bit tedious it's not a significant problem.  Even with passing up the exploit It should only take an hour or so to get 3000+ gold and level 5, which can even be achieved on the first day if you prefer the low day count challenge.

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Are we playing the same game? I did not understand a single thing you just said.

As far as I can gather, the entire game as far as progression is quests and combat. If there's anything else that can be done, I haven't found it. So perhaps the issue is not that I can't play the game, but that I don't even know what genre of game this is...

Strive is basically a monster-girl slave harem power fantasy.

The biggest challenge for most players is the lack of gold at the start of the game to buy proper armor, weapons, and bandages for combat. The game gives you 250 gold in story mode but a bit less than 1000 gold is needed for equipment for both the player character and the starting slave, so players have created guides identifying the fastest ways to get that money so that the player can get to playing the rest of the game how they want.

The first guild quest exploit (which relies on default sex ratios) is buying a cheap(less than 100 gold) female slave from the slave guild to complete the quest which provides 250 gold as a reward. This provides enough money to buy the main character good weapon and armor, which can be used to free victims from bandits for rewards of gold and equipment. Without the exploit, the player can only afford good armor and the default weapon. Bandages are used to heal up after battle. When you get enough money to buy good equipment for the start slave, then you can use them to actually defeat enemies rather than relying on them running away. This isn't a required way to play, but it is the fastest way to get the game started.

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I would absolutely not in a million years ever consider buying equipment at the start of a money management game before I have earned any money. But who knows, maybe I unknowingly play most games on hard mode, and that just isn't viable in this game.

Although now I'm thinking perhaps it actually isn't a money management game, but just an RPG, and you just start out a small amount money, like you do in money management games...?

I wouldn't consider Strive a money management game, simply because that is the weakest part of the game. For the beginning, maybe the first hour or two, money is critical and lacking; the player starts with a slave with no stats to make money from jobs and combat is by far the best way of getting money and stats. After you reach mid-game, maybe after 4 to 6 hours,  money becomes easier to get from both combat and jobs with it becoming entirely trivial after you catch or buy multiple slaves.

It probably does better as an RPG, but honestly the difficulty follows a similar difficulty curve as the money management. So that works as long as you aren't expecting a challenge outside of early game.

I'm also still confused by the concept of a power fantasy management game or a power fantasy RPG.

I'm really starting to get the impression I have just never in my life played a game of this genre and therefore have no idea what the goal is, and it just feels badly made because I'm trying to compare it to genres I have played, and it's both all and none of those...

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I'd say that you are not at all wrong with that description. I've heard it described as a jack of many trades but master of none in terms of game genre. It's a mashup of several genre,  so it can be better to describe the game in terms of it's core appeal rather than all the little additional game mechanics.

The simple matter is that the game is badly made(edit: Mav was just starting to learn to program when he made it) though it has a strange intrigue to it that make people want much more from it. It's by no means the worst game or unplayable, but it was poorly conceived at the start, evolved many times to suit user requests, and did not end on a overall strong point (many systems were never finished or fleshed out). Some of the disjoint quality of parts of the game comes from the evolution process, and some of it comes from me choosing limited sections of the game to polish up.

Well, I have tried the sequel now.

It's physically possible to complete quests.

There is absolutely no fucking benefit to doing so.

Both games are pointless. Like, the dev obviously knows how to program... but has zero concept of good game design.

If you really want to do the first quest then what you can do before even leaving town is talk to the urchin (will always be girl) in the redlight district give her food and have her come home with you then you can spend 50 gold to buy a beauty mixture use it on emily to get her beauty to the required stat then give her to the mage (you may need to interact with her in the mansion to raise obedience) this will end her sidequest line but that wont matter if you only care about males, same with the rest of the sidequests since they are all girls in them. 

It won't matter? Why not? Are quests not a method of progression, either for money or experience?

well you said u didnt care for female slaves the sidequests reward you with  female slaves and sex scenes with those slaves thus it wouldn't matter to you since you want a game with all male, as a sidenote the side quests dont give money or exp, the main quests also dont give xp but do give u some money but not much compared to what you can get using other methods. Quests in this game are more story based and the sidequests are not required to complete the main story.  

Now I'm really confused what genre of game this is... I'm used to immediately wanting to do the first quest ASAP because it immediately gets you to level 2. That's nearly always how first quests work in other games.

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its an indie adult  fantasy game, the game itself is a mix of visual novel, people management, rpgs and adventure games, and as with many games you get levels by gaining exp by defeating enemies. Examples of these games that handle leveling this way are Rpgs like fire emblem and dragon quest to name a few. 

I have not played any Fire Emblem or Dragon Quest games, but it doesn't appear that those games even have quests, so... of course the quests don't give experience because they don't exist. I guess maybe Sandbox Mode (which made no sense at all to me initially, because I figured the game was already sandbox, being purportedly a management game) is more like those non-quest-based games. If that's the case though, it's really poorly tagged, and the Story Mode is incredibly poorly conceived. Should just be under RPG, not Management, and shouldn't even have a Story Mode.

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There can be value in playing the game for its own pleasure rather than worrying about its categorization.

There is value in categorizing games correctly so that people 1) know whether they want to play it or not and 2) know what they're even fucking supposed to do so that they can enjoy it.