A downloadable game for Windows and macOS
AstroLords: Oort Cloud - is a Next-Gen 3D multiplayer space-strategy game with combat management in real-time.The game was developed using the Unity 3D engine and available for Windows, Mac OS X. Unzip the folder anywhere you like, start NIVA.exe (on Windows) or NIVA.app (on Mac). Recommended minimum system requirements. Windows 7/8/10 (64-bit OS required) or Mac OS X 10, 3 GB RAM, graphics card equivalent to ATI Radeon 5570 or NVIDIA GeForce 430 GT with 1 GB memory, approx. 1,5 GB HDD space. Explore games for macOS tagged Lewd on itch.io Upload your games for macOS to itch.io to have them show up here. New itch.io is now on YouTube! Subscribe for game recommendations, clips, and more. A fallen god has to live with an innocent angel and a very lewd demon, while he struggles to keep his desires at bay.
Anyone can kill the devil; that's why they always make teens the vampire slayers, the magical girls. But some kids can't even get that right; and that's why meangirl Neptune, tomboy Jupiter, and shy shy Venus have to endure one more week of summer camp and each other, singing boring songs about jesus, doing busywork for adults, and hoping god's radio can't hear them.
Before they can leave the summer scouts, they've got to spend twelve hours in the loneliest cabin in the woods and wait for the devil to come and live through the night--or not. You know.
A Surreal Summer Camp Dystopia
WE KNOW THE DEVIL is a Group Relationship Horror Visual novel created by weirdo games critic and indefensible twitter account haver Aevee Bee ( Mammon Machine:ZEAL) and illustrator and comics artist Mia Schwartz (http://miaschwartz.tumblr.com/), with a chilling 80s horror synth soundtrack by Alec Lambert (Antibody Productions), live photo backgrounds taken with disposable cameras in the terrifying woods where we live, and aesthetic touches and UI by Lulu Blue.
WE KNOW THE DEVIL is a story about everyone who made you cry at summer camp. It's about missing your Sailor Moon VHS tapes. It's about how being irresponsible is contagious. It's about knowing that in a group of three, two of you will be closer than the other.
And it's about being weird and queer and wrong and hoping against hope no one will find out when the actual, literal devil comes for you.
Pick Your One True Pairing
WE KNOW THE DEVIL truly has no one protagonist; but someone will always be left out. It's up to you to decide who that is. Instead of choosing a partner, you follow pairs of characters as they learn about themselves and wait for the devil to appear.
Will Venus and Neptune stop hating themselves long enough to be friends? Will Jupiter finally tell Neptune what's been on her mind? Will Venus and Jupiter make it to morning as the only good kids left alive?
Hopefully it turns out the way you want it to. Don't forget: the price the two pay will be the third.
Features
https://casino-slotscaptain-betsafe-mhym-online.peatix.com. Content Advisory
Themes of isolation and alienation of queer youth in a religious rural setting. Abstract, psychological horror, and possibly alarming music.
Brought to You By
Aevee Bee
Writer
Mia Schwartz
Art & Creative Direction
Alec Lambert
Music & Sound Effects
Lulu Blue
UI Designer
Conrad Kreyling
Technical Lead
Jo Fu
Producer & Tech Artist Drowning (itch) mac os.
Status | Released |
Platforms | Windows, macOS |
Rating | |
Author | pillowfight |
Genre | Visual Novel, Interactive Fiction |
Tags | Dating Sim, Horror, Multiple Endings, Romance |
Links | Steam |
Mentions | In defense of visual novels, itch.io Recommends: Fresh new picks to b.. |
In order to download this game you must purchase it at or above the minimum price of $6.66 USD. You will get access to the following files:
When we think of angels, we often think of the glowing, friendly helpers who carry messages between God and man. And perception isn’t wrong—throughout the Bible, angels act primarily as benign messengers.
These divine creatures are spiritual in nature, and possess incredible power, as well as the accumulated wisdom of centuries. Among their other functions are praising God, bringing answers to prayer, providing encouragement and comfort, and protecting and caring for righteous humans.
But as we’re about to find out, that’s not all they do.
There are a handful of cases, in scripture, that show angels carrying out the judgment of God upon humanity through violence.
In some cases, that judgment is death.
Angels are capable of incredible destruction, and can destroy a city with a mere gesture of the hand, as we can see in 2 Samuel 24:16. And because they are spiritual beings, once sent on their mission, they cannot be stopped by any human means.
These angelic attacks are reminders of God’s sovereign power, as well as the lengths He will go to in order to protect and guide humanity. And so, lest we forget, let’s take a look at the 5 deadliest angels of the Bible.
In Genesis 18, God came to Abraham with two angels, declaring His intention to pass judgment on the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. A great “outcry” against these cities had reached God, and He called the sin therein “very grave.”
Before God acted, however, Abraham pleaded that the city be spared so that the righteous might not be slain along with the wicked. God agreed to allow his angels to investigate the city, promising to spare it if He found fifty good people. Abraham pleaded that number down to ten.
Abraham’s nephew, Lot, lived in Sodom, and recognized the angels when they arrived, giving them a place to sleep in his house.
It wasn’t long, however, before Lot’s house was beset by the men of Sodom, who wanted the angels—who they thought were simply male visitors—brought out for their own sexual pleasures. When Lot refused, they broke down his door, and Lot only escaped through the power of his angelic guests.
When they reached safety, the angels asked lot, “Have you anyone else here…bring them out of this place. For we are about to destroy this place…”
So Lot gathered his family and left the angels to their work. These two divine beings rained down “sulfur and fire from the Lord,” reducing the cities to nothing but smoke.
For destroying two entire cities, these angels earned their place amongst the deadliest angels of the Bible.
In 715 BCE, the Israelites made a stand against Assyria, which had forced them to pay tribute to their empire for years, and so Sennacherib, the king of Assyria, attacked Jerusalem.
This was a grave mistake.
Sennacherib’s sent messages to Jerusalem, mocking God in an attempt to terrify the Israelites into giving up, saying “Surely you have heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all the countries, destroying them completely. And will you be delivered?”
When the leader of the Israelites, Hezekiah, read this, he was afraid, and prayed that God would deliver his people from danger. Not long after, Isaiah, a prophet of God, sent Hezekiah a message from God: “I will defend this city and save it.”
And so when the Assyrians arrived, God sent an angel to them that put to death 185,000 soldiers in total silence. When the army awoke the next morning, they found the dead and immediately withdrew, never to return.
This unnamed angel, one of the deadliest in the Bible, singlehandedly won a war.
Most of us are familiar with the story of the Passover, but few consider the role of a certain angel in this tale.
After Pharaoh’s stubborn refusal to release the Israelite slaves, God sent the plagues. When Pharaoh still refused, God sent an angel with an all-too-familiar name, telling Moses how to mark each Israelite door so that “His angel that brings death will pass over and not kill your first-born sons.”
This angel is the Angel of Death.
Also known as the Destroying Angel, this may very well be the same being that killed Sennacherib’s army, and that threatened Jerusalem with annihilation in 2 Samuel 24:5.
In the Passover story, it moves from home to home in Egypt, killing the firstborn sons of any whose door was not marked. “In every Egyptian home,” as Exodus 12:30 says, “someone was dead.”
The trauma of this act caused Pharaoh to finally free all of the Israelite slaves—the rest is history, but the idea of the Angel of Death was so powerful and that it still resonates in our minds to this day.
Michael, the only angel in the Bible called an “archangel,” which means “angel of highest rank,” is described in the books of Jude, Daniel, and Revelation as a powerful warrior who leads armies against evil spirits.
He may very well be one of the most powerful angels in existence.
It is he who fought and led the war against Satan, driving him from Heaven to fall “like lightning” to earth. Keep in mind that Satan, in the Bible, is described as having once been God’s greatest and most beautiful creation—an angel unsurpassed.
Although Michael has never carried out God’s judgment against humanity, the fact that he went up against Satan—and won—marks him as an especially deadly foe, and an angel not to be trifled with.
It’s no wonder, then, that traditional depictions of Michael have shown him in full battle gear, sword drawn and ready for the coming battle.
And then there is the deadliest angel of them all—the Devil, himself.
Ezekiel 28 describes Lucifer as the “guardian cherub,” a creature of utmost beauty and station who was “the signet of perfection, full of wisdom.” He was placed “on the only mountain of God; in the midst of the stones of fire you walked.”
But the very perfection that made Lucifer so great an angel was also the source of his corruption: pride. Lucifer made war against God, Himself, but was repelled by Michael and the forces of Heaven.
He was cast down to the earth, where he was allowed to go about “like a roaring lion,” devouring people through temptation and sin.
The angels of God may have claimed the lives of armies and cities so that the whole of humanity might live on in peace, but Lucifer has claimed countless millions of souls for the sole purpose of thwarting God’s plans.
Because of this, he is the very deadliest angel of the Bible.
Angels—at least those who aren’t fallen—do the work of God, and so work for the good of mankind. Even when they pass judgment through death, it is to forestall some greater calamity that only God can know.
The angels do not avenge senselessly, but avenge they do, and these 5 angels are the deadliest of them all.