3/1/2023 0 Comments Idol manager guide![]() ![]() You try to appease everyone, so you appeal to no one. This is where you, and myself, started the long painful path of Idol Group Mediocrity. You started an audition and the first thing you do is look at the Idols' overall stat level, and then looked at the various stats and went "she seems well-rounded, not weak in anything, I'll hire her." I'm sure most of you reading this have done at some point what I also did the first time I played Idol Manager ![]() Being inconsistent with your appeal will generate unhappiness and lower the opinions of demographic groups. Targeting a specific demographic and keeping it happy will yield greater fan gain from singles, sales, concert attendance, etc. The TLDR of this guide is Each idol stat corresponds to two specific demographics, which combines with your choices when making a single to determine your overall demographic appeal. (I will eventually be releasing a comprehensive guide to surviving Unfair difficulty sometime in the coming days as well.) Here, I am going to explain an overlooked portion of the game that is vital for you to understand if you want to truly thrive, or if you want to have a chance of surviving the Unfair difficulty, where money, and especially fans, are much harder to come by. Idol Manager is a game that keeps on giving, long after the first, second and third try. But at the same time it requires its own special niche player. If you’re looking for a game where you’ll soon get a chance to shine, this might not be for you.There have been a few guides posted here on steam and elsewhere about how to stay afloat financially, and many of them work, at least on default difficulty, but they are all focused on purely the financial aspects of the process, such as what contracts to take, and when and how to release singles and concerts. I need to make sure they get rest, I need to make sure they are seen in the appropriate media and I need to make sure their fans are happy and loyal. It’s a task that takes a lot of tries for me, and even if I finish the first round with a bankruptcy of rank, I feel like I need to start all over again. Maybe fine-tune some parameters to achieve a better result. Maybe spend more time with the idols to learn more about their dreams so I can help them realize them. ![]() The game itself is based on real challenges when it comes to achieving success. If the girls are not heard on the radio, their popularity fades, and to make them heard, productions are required in the form of pieces of music being played, appearances on TV and many other parameters. In other words, as the person in charge of the idol group, I have to think about everything. The game contains a lot of “micro management” However, the problem with following the guide is that I always get a legendary idol that has really high factors when it comes to charisma, stamina and success. That in itself is not really a problem, but the fact that I will soon be faced with the dilemma of paying the idols in my group and that in this case it is about rewarding according to performance creates some headaches. Idol Manager is very much about providing the resources that have been allocated from the beginning. And of course having a legendary icon in my entourage is smart because she’s famous, but when it comes to paying out salaries, having her around really stings. I don’t know if I should trust this dude really…Īlthough it’s all make-believe, real-life parameters are sprinkled throughout the title. As the person in charge of a smaller idol group, all the decisions fall on me and that’s a lot. Therefore, I completely rely on the introductory material that gives me tips on how to develop my group into a happy, but profitable business. In Idol Manager , developer Glitch Pitch delivers nothing more than a pure idol simulator, seen from the Japanese perspective. In this case, it’s about being the person who finds, takes care of and develops idols in a fictional Japanese society. In Japan it is completely different. There, an idol is something that you decide to become early in your life. Then it is necessary to train and study extremely hard to get into the role quickly. Preferably at the beginning of your teens because the amount of time you, in your profession as an idol, is very limited. These jobs bloom and wither over the course of maybe ten years and when you start approaching thirty it’s time to stop. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |