Title flow, terms, and version choice
Dream Girlfriend opens with an anime character title screen and a game start button, then presents terms of service and personal-data-use agreement screens. It also offers regular and light version choices, explaining that the lighter version may remove some image or voice data.
This setup matters because players decide both consent and download style before reaching the main game. Users with limited storage or mobile data should consider the light version, while users who want fuller presentation may prefer the regular version.
Tutorial, profile setup, and transfer options
The early game path includes a tutorial prompt, player settings, name entry, birthday selection, friend invite ID field, and data transfer screen with user ID, password, and birthday fields. These screens frame how the player identity and account recovery flow are handled.
Players should enter profile details carefully because names and birthdays can be used for account continuity or personalization. Data transfer credentials should be stored privately and not shared with other players or public support channels.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.
Permissions and game privacy
Android settings show notifications, contacts, supported links, storage, mobile data, battery, alarms and reminders, and application data controls. Notifications were blocked and no permissions were allowed during the visible settings path, keeping alerts and contacts private.
Simulation games can use notifications for events, login reminders, and campaign prompts. Players should review contacts access, notification settings, storage size, account transfer details, birthday fields, friend invite use, and download mode before committing time to a long-running profile.
This gives the section a clearer user value by connecting the main feature to a concrete mobile use case, session goal, or replay reason.