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Given that you can’t skip through most of the game beyond the first couple of scenes, that inevitably means seeing the same scenes over, and over, and over again. There’s always a rave in the field, and a dodgeball game in the gym, and studying in the classroom, and debates at the cafeteria tables. It’s still kind of funny the first couple of times you play it, but by your third or fourth playthrough you quickly realize that even if the endings change depending on which monster you play as and which monster you’re trying to woo, the path doesn’t vary all that much. I played it solo, where the game’s charms get old much, much faster. Unfortunately, as you can probably tell by the way that last paragraph was phrased, I didn’t play Monster Prom: XXL with anyone. Obviously, that’s not for everyone, but if you - and more importantly, the group of friends with whom you’re playing the game - are a fan of the outrageous, this should do the trick. It’s kind of like what I imagine a dating sim filtered through Cards Against Humanity might look, with every single interaction you have trying to both shock you and make you laugh with an overabundance of sex, swearing, violence and drugs. If you play Monster Prom: XXL as a party game with a couple of friends, it’s probably a blast. I mean, that’s obviously true for most games, but it seems especially appropriate in this case. I think your enjoyment of Monster Prom: XXL will depend entirely on the context in which you’re playing it.