Ntr Idol - Promesa De Suenos Site
Murai’s logic is cold, almost surgical. “Your songwriting is amateur, boy. It’s folk music. Sora needs pop anthems, choreography, and a clean image. A boyfriend from the sticks is a liability. A songwriter boyfriend is an anchor.”
Haruki cannot come.
Sora’s answer is the quiet heartbreak at the center of the story. She becomes a star, but the final scene of the game—a flash-forward of her waving to a sold-out crowd—features a single close-up of her eyes. They are not happy. They are not sad. They are simply empty. The promise kept her human. Without it, she is a perfect, hollow idol. Like most visual novels, Promesa de sueños features branching paths, though the NTR route is the “canonical” tragedy. However, for players seeking catharsis, two alternative endings offer different interpretations of the promise. NTR Idol - Promesa de suenos
Haruki gives up music entirely. Years later, he watches Sora on a variety show, where she jokes about her “boring childhood friend” as a punchline. He turns off the TV. He never writes another song. The promise dies completely. Murai’s logic is cold, almost surgical
Murai offers her what Haruki cannot: a sure thing. Not love, but success. The game asks a brutal question: Is it moral to sacrifice the one who believed in you for the sake of the thousands who will cheer for you? Sora needs pop anthems, choreography, and a clean image
If you approach this title expecting simple adult gratification, you will be disappointed. If you approach it as a tragedy of modern relationships—a Requiem for a Dream set to J-pop—you will find one of the most devastatingly honest stories ever told in the visual novel medium.
The game’s first act is deceptive in its tenderness. The writing lovingly details their rehearsals in a dusty garage, the way Sora’s eyes light up when Haruki plays a new chord progression, and the innocent intimacy of two souls sharing a single ambition. This is the "Promesa" (Promise)—a sacred, unbreakable vow.