In Gehenna Fantasy Heroine Edition scores 63/100 — better than 8% of Free to Play capsules (n=2,194).

Quick text summary

In Gehenna Fantasy Heroine Edition scored 63/100 on Steam Analyzer — Solid for a Free to Play capsule. Top priority fix: [title_readability] Replace thin italic subtitle font with bolder sans-serif at larger point size to maintain legibility at tiny scale; consider moving it below the character or right-aligning to a cleaner background area.

Capsule scores by dimension

  • Genre Clarity: 7/10 — Anime RPG with fantasy heroine focus. The anime character in combat-ready pose with magical aura suggests fantasy RPG, and the 'Fantasy Heroine Edition' subtitle reinforces character-driven gameplay. At tiny size, the magical glow and character silhouette still read as fantasy action, though the specific turn-based mechanic is not visually communicated.
  • Title Readability: 6/10 — Primary title readable, subtitle struggles small. The 'After Gehenna' title in white italic font is clear at full size but loses definition at small scale due to thin letterforms. The magenta 'Fantasy Heroine Edition' subtitle becomes difficult to parse at tiny size, with individual letters collapsing into blur and reduced contrast against the background.
  • Contrast & Color: 7/10 — Strong character pop, gradient background reads well. The pale-skinned anime character with white/gray hair and bright purple eyes creates clear silhouette separation from the dark purple-to-gold gradient background. The character's light value contrasts effectively at all sizes, though the subtitle magenta competes slightly with the background glow and struggles in grayscale separation.
  • Uniqueness & Polish: 6/10 — Polished anime style, generic fantasy aesthetic. The character illustration is well-rendered with clean linework and soft shading, and the particle glow effect is competent. However, the composition and magical gradient background feel formulaic for anime RPG capsules—the scene communicates 'fantasy heroine' without revealing unique mechanics or a distinctive hook that differentiates it from comparable titles.
  • Brand Consistency: 5/10 — Anime character style, no memorable signature. The character design and illustration style are consistent and professional, but there are no iconic symbols, recurring motifs, or signature palette elements visible that would allow recognition of this game's identity in isolation. The gradient and particle effects are generic fantasy tropes rather than brand-specific visual language.
  • Composition: 7/10 — Strong focal point, title placement works. The character is centered and dominates the frame with clear hierarchy, while the magical glow creates depth and directs attention. The title is positioned in the upper-right quadrant with readable spacing, and the gradient background supports the character without distraction, though the layout feels predictable and symmetrical at small size.

What works

  • Character silhouette clarity. The anime character's light value and defined outline stand out distinctly against the dark Steam background at all viewing sizes.
  • Professional illustration quality. The character rendering, hair detail, and eye design show clean craft and competent anime art direction.
  • Title positioning and spacing. The 'After Gehenna' text is strategically placed on a cleaner background region and maintains readability at full and small sizes.

What hurts the capsule

  • Subtitle legibility at tiny size. The magenta 'Fantasy Heroine Edition' text becomes illegible at thumbnail scale due to thin italic letterforms and insufficient contrast against the warm glow.
  • Generic visual identity. The gradient, particles, and character pose are formulaic for anime RPG games, with no distinctive visual language or memorable brand symbol.
  • Gameplay mechanic invisibility. Nothing in the capsule communicates 'turn-based RPG' or 'recruit allies'—the visuals suggest action-fantasy rather than tactical recruitment gameplay.

Priority fixes

  1. [title_readability] Replace thin italic subtitle font with bolder sans-serif at larger point size to maintain legibility at tiny scale; consider moving it below the character or right-aligning to a cleaner background area.
  2. [genre_clarity] Add subtle visual cues that signal turn-based mechanics or party recruitment, such as small character portraits, a recruitment interface detail, or a grid/tactical indicator in the glow effect.
  3. [uniqueness_polish] Introduce a signature color accent, iconic symbol, or distinctive art treatment (e.g., a heroine-specific emblem, unique aura pattern, or UI frame) that establishes memorable brand identity beyond generic fantasy.
  4. [composition] Test the capsule at 231×87 and 120×45 sizes to ensure both title and character remain readable without overlap, and verify no important elements sit too close to the cropping edges.

Store copy priority fixes

  1. [hook_strength] Rewrite the opening line to lead with a specific narrative or mechanical hook (e.g., 'Lead your guild through escalating disasters, recruit heroes with clashing abilities, and master tactical turn-based combat') instead of generic exposition about Gehenna.
  2. [uniqueness] Add 2–3 sentences describing what makes this game's character roster, disaster encounters, or progression unique compared to other free-to-play JRPGs (e.g., mention a specific mechanic or class archetype).
  3. [feature_communication] Expand each bullet point with one sentence of context explaining why the feature matters (e.g., 'Dispatch: Send unused characters on timed missions to earn resources without active play').
  4. [audience_targeting] Add a one-sentence closing sentence that explicitly names the intended audience (e.g., 'Perfect for fans of classic JRPGs and old-school turn-based strategy') to reinforce the old-school anime RPG identity signaled by tags.

Related guides

Steam app ID: 3600820 · Tags: Free to Play, RPG, Turn-Based Combat, Fantasy, Early Access