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Under Control -v0.1.22a- By Slusiom Now

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.

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.

Slusiom uses a realistic 3D render style (likely Daz3D) with a muted, slightly desaturated color palette. This isn’t the bright, glossy world of Being a DIK ; it’s closer to the shadowy interiors of Depraved Awakening or Pale Carnations . Lighting is used masterfully—deep shadows, single-lamp desk scenes, silhouettes in doorways. The renders are consistently high-resolution, with only minor stiffness in facial expressions (a common engine limitation). Under Control -v0.1.22A- By Slusiom

v0.1.22A Developer: Slusiom Genre: Adult Visual Novel, Sandbox, Domination/Corruption, Psychological Thriller

This is not a game for casual players. Themes include coercion, psychological manipulation, non-explicit but implied duress, and a pervasive atmosphere of unequal power. There is no graphic violence in this build, but the emotional violence is constant. Slusiom does not glorify the actions so much as present them as a disturbing puzzle. If you prefer wholesome or equal-footing relationships, avoid this title. If you appreciate dark fiction that explores why people submit, this will grip you. You step into the role of a protagonist

The UI is clean and minimalist: dark greys, small fonts, and a sandbox-style map that lets you choose your next action (eavesdrop, patrol, “invite,” etc.). The version number (0.1.22A) suggests iterative refinement, and indeed, I encountered no major bugs or broken paths. The music is sparse—mostly low, ambient drones—which amplifies the tension rather than distracting from it.

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. This isn’t the bright, glossy world of Being

The writing in v0.1.22A is lean but effective. Slusiom favors implication over exposition. You learn about the characters’ fears, secrets, and desires not through long monologues, but through environmental details, hesitant dialogue, and your own decisions as the player. The main female leads—each with distinct personalities (the cold professional, the fragile dependent, the rebellious wildcard)—react believably to your escalating demands. Their resistance doesn’t vanish overnight, which is the game’s greatest strength.

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.

Slusiom has a firm hand on the reins. Now we wait to see where he steers. Review written after 4 hours of play, two partial playthroughs (one “aggressive control,” one “patient observer”). Version tested on Windows 10.

Slusiom’s Under Control arrives with a title that promises a very specific power dynamic, and even in its early stage (v0.1.22A), it delivers on that premise with surprising confidence. This is not a lighthearted dating sim or a harem-building comedy. From the opening scenes, the game establishes a tone that is tense, manipulative, and deliberately uncomfortable—in the way that fans of the “corruption” and “slow-burn domination” genres appreciate.