The "Full Course" part refers to the combo system. Serve an appetizer, main course, and dessert that match a girl’s specific taste profile, and she unlocks a special attack animation. Watching a lamia perform a judo flip on a goblin because you fed her a perfect soufflé is the peak of video game absurdity. Let’s be real: This is a budget 3DS title. The graphics are chunky, the dungeons are repetitive, and the voice acting is lifted straight from the anime’s B-roll. But the charm is off the charts.
Spoiler: It’s as bizarre and delightful as it sounds. You play as the hapless "Darling" (Kurusu). One day, your house full of liminal ladies gets sucked into a mysterious fantasy book. To get home, you have to fight through grid-based dungeons. But here’s the twist: You don’t fight. The girls do. monmusu delicious full course
Your job? Stand in the back, give orders, and—most importantly—. The "Delicious" Mechanic The title isn't just for show. After every battle, monsters drop meat, herbs, and dubious slime organs. You take these back to camp and cook them into meals. The "Full Course" part refers to the combo system
If you’ve ever watched Daily Life with a Monster Girl (Monster Musume) and thought, “I love the comedy, but I really wish this came with a side of wasabi and a cooking minigame,” then boy, do I have a weird snack for you. Let’s be real: This is a budget 3DS title
Enter . It sounds like a cookbook. It sounds like a DLC expansion. In reality, it’s the 2015 3D action-adventure game for the Nintendo 3DS that asked the question nobody asked: What if we put Miia, Papi, and Centorea in a dungeon crawler… and made them eat monster guts for buffs?
Have you played this deep cut, or are you brave enough to hunt down a 3DS cart? Let me know in the comments—and don’t bring Papi near the open flame.