Clover Reset scores 60/100 — better than 0% of LGBTQ+ capsules (n=365).

Quick text summary

Clover Reset scored 60/100 on Steam Analyzer — Solid for a LGBTQ+ capsule. Top priority fix: [contrast_color] Darken the background or add a gradient overlay with stronger value contrast; consider a darker navy or slate backdrop that separates the characters and logo from the Steam dark theme.

Capsule scores by dimension

  • Genre Clarity: 7/10 — Anime visual novel romance. The two school-uniformed girls with pink bows and soft anime art style clearly signal a dating sim or visual novel romance game. At tiny size, the school uniforms and character design remain readable enough to identify the genre, though the four-leaf clover motif in the logo is too subtle to resolve clearly at smallest sizes.
  • Title Readability: 6/10 — Logo readable, decorative styling. The 'Clover Reset' logo uses a light cyan/turquoise color with decorative leaf flourishes that reads adequately at full size but becomes difficult to parse at tiny size due to thin linework and ornamental details. At small capsule size (231x87), the logo struggles to maintain clarity, and the subtitle text below is largely illegible.
  • Contrast & Color: 5/10 — Limited separation from light background. The pale off-white background with soft pastel anime characters creates a high-key, low-contrast composition that does not read well against Steam's dark background when viewed at small size. The light cyan logo merges into the light background rather than popping, and the overall pastel palette lacks the value separation needed for quick-scroll discoverability.
  • Uniqueness & Polish: 6/10 — Competent anime art, generic presentation. The character art is well-rendered and the anime style is clean, but the composition—two characters facing forward in a neutral stance—follows a common visual novel template without a distinctive hook or narrative element. The soft, pastel aesthetic is polished but does not communicate a unique selling point or memorable core mechanic beyond 'school romance'.
  • Brand Consistency: 6/10 — Soft palette, typical visual novel identity. The design uses a consistent soft, pastel color scheme and recognizable anime character rendering style typical of the genre, but there are no distinctive brand symbols, iconic motifs, or signature visual elements that would make it memorable on return viewing. The four-leaf clover concept appears only in the logo and does not carry through the visual identity.
  • Composition: 6/10 — Centered characters, safe framing. The two characters are positioned in the center-right area with the logo to the left, creating balanced but static composition with no strong focal point hierarchy. At tiny size, the entire composition flattens and both characters read as equal visual weight; there is adequate safe margin around edges but the layout feels formulaic and lacks depth layering or compelling eye guidance.

What works

  • Clean anime character rendering. Character art is well-illustrated with smooth lines, readable faces, and intentional design details like the school uniforms and pink bows.
  • Logo concept tied to narrative. The four-leaf clover concept in the logo connects to the game's thematic hook mentioned in the description.

What hurts the capsule

  • Poor contrast against dark Steam background. The pale off-white background and soft pastel colors do not create sufficient value separation to stand out in a crowded storefront or during quick scroll.
  • Generic visual novel template composition. The centered two-character, facing-forward pose is a standard formula in the genre that does not differentiate this game visually from dozens of similar titles.
  • Logo loses legibility at small sizes. Decorative leaf flourishes and thin linework in the title collapse or blur at capsule and thumbnail sizes, reducing immediate readability.

Priority fixes

  1. [contrast_color] Darken the background or add a gradient overlay with stronger value contrast; consider a darker navy or slate backdrop that separates the characters and logo from the Steam dark theme.
  2. [title_readability] Simplify the logo linework and increase stroke weight on letterforms; add a dark outline or shadow to improve legibility at small sizes without losing the clover motif.
  3. [composition] Introduce depth layering by positioning one character slightly forward or offset to create focal point hierarchy; reduce symmetry to add visual interest and guide eye flow at thumbnail size.
  4. [uniqueness_polish] Add a narrative or environmental context element (e.g., school setting detail, key object, or visual metaphor) that hints at the core mechanic or emotional story, moving beyond generic character lineup.

Store copy priority fixes

  1. [feature_communication] Add a bullet-point list of core gameplay features after the short description: 'Make choices that shape relationships,' 'Unlock multiple endings,' 'Experience [X] hours of story,' 'Pursue different romantic paths,' etc.
  2. [uniqueness] Rewrite the 'Dynamic Character Expressions System' section to explain what it does mechanically and why it matters to immersion (e.g., 'Over 200+ unique emotional expressions bring characters to life beyond static anime portraits').
  3. [hook_strength] Move the core emotional conflict (secrets, trauma, 'storm threatens') into the opening paragraph of the detailed description to land dramatic stakes earlier and compete for attention against character bios.
  4. [feature_communication] Clarify story length, estimated playtime, and number of choice branches/endings to help players understand the scope and replayability value.

Related guides

Steam app ID: 3239250 · Tags: LGBTQ+, Visual Novel, Female Protagonist, Adventure, Dating Sim