Your job is to find the parts of your girl’s hands where she’s tense and then apply pressure to release the tension. With Senran Kagura Reflexions, you build your relationship with the Senran Kagura girl of your choice (Asuka is available in the base package, and others available via DLC) by massaging her. With Love Plus that relationship would be built by picking the right dialogue choices for the girl. Basically, the more time you spend with a girl, doing things right by her, the more she’ll fall in love with you, and then you “win” the game.
In principle Reflexions is a dating simulator, in the vein of Love Plus or Summer Lesson (which isn’t a dating game, but follows the same structure, and is one of the rare other examples of this genre actually being localised into English). The closest to clever Reflexions ever gets is its name, which is a play on “reflexology” (the form of massage that the game simulates), and “reflections” because the “narrative” – such as it is – is heavily dominated by a series of reflective memories. And this one is much harder to defend, since it doesn’t seem to be self-aware at all. Our full reviewīut with Senran Kagura Reflexions, the developers have only given those critics more ammunition. Related reading: Senran Kagura Peach Beach Splash is an example of this franchise at its best.