Purists may find Frontier too abstract. It sacrifices character development (which was already sparse) for thematic resolution. It answers the "Why?" but rarely the "How?"
are not games you play for entertainment; they are artifacts you study. They represent the bleeding edge of the "Ugly" aesthetic—a brutal, unflinching look at the end of the world. For fans of obscure, psychological horror visual novels (like Sayo no Uta or Kikokugai ), this duology is a hidden gem that cuts deep. For everyone else, it will likely just look like a mess.
If the first Buzama was about the discovery of depravity, Henka is about the resignation to it.