-v0.1.22a- By Slusiom - Under Control

Fans of psychological domination, slow corruption, sandbox investigation, and morally gray narratives. Not recommended for: Players seeking immediate lewd scenes, lighthearted romance, or clearly defined heroes.

If Pale Carnations is a public spectacle of degradation and The Assistant is a slow office takeover, Under Control sits somewhere in between: private, domestic, and methodical. It lacks the humor of Corruption or the sheer volume of content in Harem Hotel , but its quality-per-scene ratio is notably high. Slusiom is clearly influenced by the psychological thriller genre (films like The Gift or Creep ) more than standard adult games.

7.5/10 Potential at full release: 9/10

Under Control -v0.1.22A- is a diamond in the rough—sharp-edged, dark, and highly promising. It respects your intelligence by not rushing its kinks, and it respects the genre by treating control as a process, not a button. The current build will leave you wanting more, but that’s a sign of effective writing, not frustration.

One clever mechanic: Resistance vs. Compliance is a visible stat, but trying to brute-force too quickly backfires. You have to genuinely learn each woman’s breaking point. A character who responds to blackmail might shut down under physical intimidation. Another who fears exposure might become a willing accomplice if you offer protection from a different threat. This layered approach saves the game from feeling like a simple “click to corrupt” simulator. Under Control -v0.1.22A- By Slusiom

The current version is undeniably a work in progress. You can feel the skeleton of a larger narrative, and some systems are still creaking under their own ambition. However, what is present is polished, atmospheric, and intriguing enough to warrant a serious look from players who enjoy psychological leverage over pure, immediate lewd content.

v0.1.22A Developer: Slusiom Genre: Adult Visual Novel, Sandbox, Domination/Corruption, Psychological Thriller It lacks the humor of Corruption or the

You step into the role of a protagonist who, through circumstances revealed gradually (and somewhat cryptically in this build), finds himself in a position of quiet authority over a household of women. The setup avoids the tired “magic spell” or “hypno-watch” clichés. Instead, the control feels earned through observation, blackmail, and exploiting existing character flaws—which makes it far more unsettling and engaging.