RPG Shooter Starwish

RPG Shooter: Starwish is a Web Game that is Exactly What It Says on the Tin -- a Horizontal Scrolling Shooter with RPG Elements. Specifically, the author describes it as "a unique blend of a shooter, rpg, Visual Novel and Dating Sim". A lot of the drive of the game is based upon the storyline, the character interaction, and the upgrades and level ups for the main "shooter" game, which is played during missions on various sites of interest on the current planet.

If you haven't played it through at least once, beware of unmarked spoilers.


 * The Ace: Mare.
 * Action Girl: Neferiti and . Also Oracle, since she is the captain of an entire mothership and.
 * A Father to His Men: Oracle and Gen.
 * An Aesop: Not as blatant as usual. Still, at the end of every ending, Deuce will make a short speech of what he has realized, mostly basic things like "Live life to the fullest" or "Try to make friends with your enemies".
 * And Man Grew Proud: The people of Lucerna grew quite decadent and egomaniacal over time, especially near the end of their civilization, since they had anything anyone could wish for. The usually only interacted with outsiders for the amusement value, which is what in-universe actually spawned the concept of the Jackass Genie, otherwise regarding them only as lower species, like ants.
 * All Amazons Want Hercules: will only romance you if you prove yourself in battle.
 * A Long Time Ago in a Galaxy Far Far Away: Humans apparently hail from "Home Planet". Earth does come up in a gag in Ginny's Ending though.
 * Animesque
 * Anti-Villain:, Type I with shades of Type II. Her goals are very simple and not even typical villain ones (Not Immortality Immorality. She just doesn't want to die (at barely 30 yet!) and she tries to avoid collateral damage where she can . She is willing to just ignore her enemies and let them go if they don't bother her and tends to give them a warning before destroying them. She is nonetheless very ruthless on her path, but strictly sticks to her word.
 * A Taste of Power: The prologue gives you two weapons you won't get for real until later.
 * Babies Ever After: In Deadeye's,  endings.
 * Battle Theme Music: There's only one that plays during every level and one that plays during every Boss Battle that isn't the end of a chapter. You better like them, because you'll be hearing them a lot.
 * Be Careful What You Wish For: A lot of trouble in this story would never have happened if the characters had followed this rule.
 * The Bechdel Test: The game passes it, barely.
 * Though the game is hardly lacking female presence. Six of the nine people who are ever part of the mothership's crew are female, two of the three major ships are captained by women, and the apparently best pilot in the galaxy is female.
 * Benevolent Genie: is an immensely benevolent genie, giving you exactly what you want to the limits of her ability, and giving you a gift if you can get what you want without wishing for it.
 * Big Eater: Neferiti, apparently.
 * Bittersweet Ending:
 * : Deadeye..
 * Blue and Orange Morality:
 * places a very low value on non-Lucernan life, compared to her own.
 * Lucernans in general place a very low value on non-Lucernan life. explains it best as similar to how humans would treat ants.
 * Bonus Material: RPG Shooter: Starwish Extras on Kongregate, among other things, contains the much wanted ability to view any cutscene at any time.
 * Boobs of Steel:
 * Bullfight Boss: A lot of the bosses:
 * The Wisp is a combination of this and Get Back Here Boss, charging wildly and running offscreen before charging back.
 * The Crystal Dragon, which charges at you and then simply reappears at the other end of the screen.
 * The Rocket Snail, which charges at you, jumps up, then goes back to the other end of the screen.
 * The Submersible is almost a parody of this. Its main attack is slowly lumbering toward you, but the fact that it's always in a water level (which cripples your ship's speed to about a third of how fast it should go) means that maxing out engine mods is almost essential to dodge it.
 * Cast From Lifespan:
 * Character Portrait: Full-body ones, though almost the entire lower half of them are covered up by the dialog box.
 * Chekhov's Gun:
 * Chivalrous Pervert: Deuce.
 * Climax Boss: The Earthwall and Firebolt.
 * Collision Damage: Avoid taking it, or you're in for a world of pain.
 * In the first version, the collision detection was so horrible that you were liable to be often killed by walls you obviously weren't even touching. Much rage ensued. An update fixed this almost entirely.
 * Color-Coded Elements:
 * Computer Voice: The ship's computer not only talks, it seems to have a sense of humor.
 * Cool Old Lady: Oracle.
 * Cool Sword: Neferiti has a gold hilted, ruby studded sword. On both hips.
 * Cosmetic Award: Achievements don't do anything, and say more about your patience than your actual skill. If you know what you're doing, you can get them all on a single run.
 * Critical Existence Failure: Averted. Taking damage makes your ship slower.
 * Curse Cut Short: Often.
 * Cut and Paste Environments: There's 30 levels and only 9 scrolling background images. Color filters are used to give at least some variety.
 * Cutscene Incompetence: Deuce nearly gets himself killed and has to be rescued by Mare. Twice.
 * Cut Song: A few songs on the soundtrack aren't in the game because they would have made the file too big.
 * Cutting Off the Branches: On Kongregate, users can vote for which ending out of the ones they've seen they think should be canon for a sequel.
 * Dead Guy, Junior: In Tessa's and 's endings, Deuce and his Love Interest name their child(ren) after those who didn't make it out of the story alive, therefore averting Forgotten Fallen Friend.
 * Deadly Disc: The Sawmines. They're a totally insane concept, being boomerang circular saws in space, and their attack pattern and stats seem all over the place. They also output more DPS than almost any other weapon at a comparable level, ignore terrain, and go right through enemies to hit multiple targets in a wide swath. With the player skill that upgrades their forward range from "pathetic" to "most of the screen", they trivialize otherwise diabolical enemy placements in some of the later levels and maul bosses, leaving only a few circumstances where you need to use anything else, or even want to.
 * Given that their functionality bears an uncanny resemblance to the crucifix subweapon from Castlevania, fans of the Castlevania series probably figured this out immediately.
 * Defeat Means Friendship:
 * Defrosting Ice Queen: . Bonus points because Deuce actually calls her an ice queen.
 * also.
 * Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?:
 * Did You Just Romance Cthulhu?:
 * Difficulty Levels: Normal, hard, and extreme.
 * Disney Death:
 * Doing in the Scientist: The story abruptly changes from Science Fiction into High Fantasy about halfway through.
 * Though, admittedly, it was pretty soft sci-fi to begin with.
 * Drunken Master: Swig.
 * Dysfunction Junction: Though not as blatant as most examples, almost everyone has at least one major problem they tell to Deuce.
 * Easily Forgiven:
 * Elemental Powers: Trademark ability for the inhabitants of the planet Lucerna, with a bit of Reality Warper thrown in for good measure: the djinni have control over air, while their eternal enemies, the efreeti, have control over fire.
 * Eldritch Abomination:
 * Emotionless Girl: Neferiti and.
 * Evil Redhead: Neferiti.
 * Feminine Women Can Cook: Inverted with Tessa and Deuce.
 * Fiction 500:
 * Fictional Currency / Global Currency / Practical Currency: "Moolah" is not only a unit of currency, but the only word for money (for instance, there are "moolah schemes"). You can get it from scrap, even when there's no one around to sell it to (later in the game), suggesting that the scrap has a standardized value and acts as moolah. Then again, your only use for moolah is "buying" upgrades for your fighter, and by the final world, both of your suppliers may be perfectly content to talk about the moolah value of scrap insofar as it lets them build those upgrades.
 * Fiery Redhead: Inverted with Neferiti.
 * Flash of Pain
 * Forgotten Friend, New Foe:
 * Fridge Logic:
 * Funny Animal: Appear here as alien species. Including Pandas and Kitsune.
 * Gameplay and Story Segregation: Some of the more urgent cutscenes feel like they were just chopped in half, and only resume once you've done another mission. The missions themselves rarely seem to have any impact on the story after the first third of the game, too.
 * There's also a bit of story and subplot segregation of sorts: you can casually chat with the members of the crew even while a Climax Boss is supposed to be bearing down on the ship.
 * Get Back Here Boss: The Wisp. It zooms around in an infinity symbol-shaped path, dealing staggering amounts of damage if it hits you, while firing lasers in a circle.
 * Get Rich Quick Scheme: Johnny often tries these, and seems to always be broke.
 * Giant Space Flea From Nowhere: Every boss that's not a level on its own.
 * It is stated early in the game that the Federation have deployed specialized guardians to several locations, but no more details are given.
 * Gratuitous Japanese: "Starwish" is unnecessarily transliterated into katakana on the title screen.
 * Grudging Thank You: Deuce gives one to Mare.
 * Harder Than Hard: Extreme mode, turned on with a hidden button on hard mode. Any shot that gets through your shields will kill you.
 * Hard Mode Perks: You can only unlock the Special Ending and  on hard mode.
 * Hates Small Talk: Mare initially appears to be The Voiceless, answering all your attempts to strike up a conversation with an ellipsis. Mare does finally start to talk to you, but still doesn't say much, and tells you that before "You never said anything important."
 * Heel Face Turn:.
 * Heel Realization:
 * Hidden Depths: A good part of the story is about Deuce coming to realize that the people he lives with are more than what they first appeared.
 * Though it seems strange that Deuce gets to know his crew better in the 30 days the game takes place in than he did in the years he was presumably serving before. Did he just not talk to them?
 * Hidden Elf Village: The Enigma. You don't actually encounter any, but their planet is the second world.
 * Heroic Sacrifice: (though that one was ultimately meaningless) and.
 * Hopeless Boss Fight: The Firebolt in the beginning. It can be beaten for an achievement in a New Game+, but good luck with that.
 * Humans Are White: In the future there will be more anthropomorphic pandas than black people.
 * Humble Hero: Deuce.
 * Hurting Hero:
 * I Don't Want to Ruin Our Friendship: Tessa to Deuce in her final cafe conversation. Tessa says she loves Deuce, but Deuce is upset that she doesn't mean it romantically. Of course, she changes her mind in her ending.
 * I Have This Friend: Inverted. In a conversation with Deuce, Ginny mentions how Tessa has a certain friend who keeps endangering himself, showing that Deuce isn't the only one that hears Tessa complaining about his recklessness.
 * Internal Reformist: is either a type 1 or type 3, it isn't really clear which. Unfortunately,.
 * It's All My Fault:
 * Karma Houdini:
 * King Incognito:
 * The Klutz: Ginny has trouble holding things.
 * Know When to Fold'Em: Mare's first lesson to Deuce, taught with extreme firepower.
 * Kuudere: does not easily reach out to people. This is even implemented in the game mechanics.
 * Leitmotif: All of the characters who appear in the cafe, except for Mare. Swig and Johnny end up sharing their leitmotif, as well.
 * Lethal Chef: There is exactly one person other than herself we know of that thinks of Deadeye's food as anything other than poison.
 * Limit Break: Overdrive.
 * Luck Stat: Subverted in that the game tells you exactly what it does.
 * MacGuffin: The Star Fragments.
 * Mad Scientist: Deadeye.
 * Martial Pacifist: The Pandakin were an entire race of these, having stockpiled weapons purely for defensive wars.
 * Masochist's Meal: Deadeye's cooking is enjoyed by (almost) no one but herself. Johnny apparently knows such recipes but doesn't inflict them on the crew. Deuce has this impression of Tessa's cooking.
 * Meaningful Name / Punny Name:  In short, every  in the story has a name that at least sounds somewhat like their species, to the point where characters start using character name and species name interchangeably (without an article) when referring to them, causing confusion just what their real name is supposed to be.
 * Not to mention and . Or Swig. Even Deuce arguably counts, having a bit of The Gambler.
 * Deuce could come from
 * Or the two you come across, Kitsune and Triton.
 * In fact, of all the named characters, only Gen and Tessa don't seem to be this.
 * name could also be a hint that
 * Min-Maxing: Players came to the conclusion that maxing out Defense and Intel, a build the creator calls the Defense Monger, is the way to go. It makes getting the Chosen One achievement a lot easier.
 * Money Spider: Mostly justified in that enemies are said to be used as scrap.
 * Moon Logic Puzzle: A puzzle in the form of the way the cafe conversations in this game work, which is almost a Guide Dang It. Characters need to be talked to a certain number of times in order for you to select their ending, but characters can only be talked to once every few days, and with certain requirements. Johnny gives hints for what the requirements are, but only once per character and in a way that's less than obvious; the creator even has a non-walkthrough guide created to further help players, though it hasn't stopped players from having to figure it out themselves. In particular, Ginny's;.
 * Moral Myopia: Neferiti had one form of this in the past and perhaps another form of it later on.
 * Multiple Endings: Nine of them. Five romantic ones for the five girls, two non-romantic ones for the hero's male best friends, a normal ending and a special ending. Unlike typical examples, the standard ending, requiring the least effort to reach, is actually pretty damn good.
 * New Game+: Subverting the usual tropes, the New Game+ is usually more difficult each time around.
 * No Death Run: Required up to a point to see all of Ginny's cafe conversations. Completing the entire game without dying will net you an achievement.
 * No Fair Cheating: The game has an internal cheat detection system that will lock you out of getting endings if it thinks you modified the data. In the first release it was too sensitive and could be triggered by starting a New Game+ or just by grinding too much. An update toned it down.
 * Non-Action Guy: Johnny.
 * The Notable Numeral: The seven pirate lords. Each of them is known to excel in a certain field, such as escape, weaponry or infiltration.
 * Not So Above It All: Mare makes exactly one joke, though even then not really reaching the lightheartedness most of the other characters have.
 * The Obi-Wan:
 * Older Than They Look: Johnny claims to be this.
 * Omnicidal Maniac:
 * Only Known by Their Nickname: "Deadeye", though talking to her reveals that her actual name is.
 * Opening Scroll: Apparently in reference to Star Wars.
 * Our Genies Are Different
 * Patchwork Map:
 * Peek-a-Bangs: Deadeye's hair covers one eye.
 * Pirates: The heroes are type 2. See below.
 * The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: Yeah, for "pirates", the heroes don't do much actual piracy. Well, they do shoot down Federation drones and then salvage them for tech and stuff, but that's about it. Kind of justified given that the pirates have become the only faction in the universe powerful enough to be on the same level as the Federation, so what initially may have been only raiders and looters became a huge mass of rebels, freedom-fighters and simply anyone who opposed the Federation's restrictive laws.
 * Point Build System: When you level up, you get points to spend on your stats however you want.
 * Pointy Ears:
 * Punny Name: Played for Drama, to the detriment of its owner;
 * Ragtag Bunch of Misfits: The pirates don't seem to be at all picky about who joins up with them. For example, Deadeye joined just because she approached the pirates and asked to work on questionable weapons, and no one ever finds this suspicious.
 * Recurring Boss: Pretty much every boss of the regular stages is fought three times, each time with increasing health and attack power. They have either a new attack or new mechanic on the third time, though (for example, Drone Mothership can send out drones, while the Rocket Snail's eyes are now invincible).
 * Red Baron: Aurica is known as Oracle. Mare's a legendary bounty hunter known as The Nightmare. In the standard ending,
 * Redemption Earns Life: Sort of.
 * Regenerating Health: Can be gained as a skill near the end of the game.
 * Rose-Haired Girl: Tessa.
 * Sealed Evil in a Can:
 * Seer: Oracle's signature ability.
 * Shipper on Deck: Johnny, towards Deuce and most of the love interests.
 * Show, Don't Tell: The game violates this rule many times, unfortunately.
 * Simple Score of Sadness: "Broken".
 * Small Role, Big Impact: Gen only appears in two cutscenes but delivers some important Exposition.
 * Songs in the Key of Panic: "Firestorm".
 * Spoiled Sweet:
 * Spread Shot: The Spread.
 * Star-Killing: What killed Bamboo.
 * , but at least.
 * Except this releases the Big Bad, She is not happy about this.
 * Stepford Smiler:  is a type 1.
 * The Stoic: Mare, even after starting to talk, remains very silent and serious. Neferiti is similar.
 * Take Your Time: The Big Bad may be looming over you, but don't let that stop you from grinding to your heart's content. Time only passes when you complete a level you haven't completed before.
 * Tenchi Solution: Given what the game markets itself as, it's not surprising that this would be the outcome in the Special Ending.
 * Title Drop:
 * Title Drop:


 * Too Dumb to Live: Deuce seems to be holding the Idiot Ball in a really bad way at times, like when
 * Tsundere: Tessa.
 * Unexplained Recovery: When, no one seems to question it much.
 * The Voiceless: Mare. For half of the story, anyway.
 * Victorious Childhood Friend: Tessa, in her ending.
 * Warmup Boss: The Drone Mothership. You can literally beat it by standing in one spot, without getting hit.
 * White-Haired Pretty Girl: Ginny.
 * Wizards from Outer Space: The Lucernans and Oracle have supernatural powers.
 * Wrench Wench: Ginny.
 * You Remind Me of X:
 * Wrench Wench: Ginny.
 * You Remind Me of X: