Ideal Father – Living Together With Beloved Daughter -

The game didn't end with a tragedy. It ended with her graduation, a polite nod, and a text message: "Thanks for everything. I’ll send money when I can."

The game opens not with a hug, but with a silence. A long, painful silence across a breakfast table. ideal father – living together with beloved daughter

I focused on finances—overtime, promotions, a bigger apartment. I thought a "proper father" provides stability. By day 180, Miki had perfect grades and a brand new laptop. She also stopped eating dinner with me. By day 300, she moved her bedtime earlier just to avoid conversation. The game didn't end with a tragedy

I had raised a successful, emotionally absent stranger. A long, painful silence across a breakfast table

Your goal isn’t to "win." It’s to survive 365 days. Every decision—from what you pack in her lunch to whether you attend the parent-teacher conference—affects a hidden set of metrics: Trust, Independence, and Emotional Safety. Most parenting games turn children into quest-givers. Ideal Father refuses that.

Miki won’t tell you when she’s being bullied. You have to notice the torn notebook in her bag. She won’t say she misses her mom. You hear it in how she pauses at the front door every evening. She won’t ask for help with homework. She’ll just stay up until 2 AM, pretending to be fine.

Date: April 13, 2026 Category: Game Analysis / Emotional Design Est. read time: 5 minutes