To participate (if you are a current Ariel Academy student or a very persistent ghost), you must:
Based on the title provided, this appears to be a Japanese-style Visual Novel (ren'ai game), likely an RPG adventure or a narrative-heavy game with slice-of-life and fantasy elements. The title suggests a school setting ("Academy"), a specific event ("School Festival"), and an element of mystery or hidden lore ("Secret"). Ariel Academy-s Secret School Festival -v1.0- -...
For three centuries, Ariel Academy has stood on the windswept cliffs of Northfall Bay—a prestigious boarding school known for its rigorous academics, its sky-blue uniforms, and a library that allegedly contains books which read the reader. But beneath the polished veneer of Latin declamations and rowing trophies lies a tradition so bizarre, so carefully hidden, that most faculty members deny its existence outright. To participate (if you are a current Ariel
The festival honored failure with a candor that felt revolutionary. A science fair table that had once been the site of triumphant formulas was dedicated to experiments gone wrong; small plaques explained what each mishap had taught. The message was simple: risk is an engine, and the rusted gears are worth studying. Students were invited to write apologies they had been avoiding—letters that might never be sent—and tuck them into a box to be retrieved at the next Secret Festival. The ritual acknowledged guilt without flaying it, preferring healing measures that resembled gardening: pull a weed, sow a seed, wait. But beneath the polished veneer of Latin declamations
Choose which supernatural faction to support during the festival’s grand finale.
If someone were to press for a moral, it would be modest: not all rituals need public sanction to be meaningful; not every secret needs to be hoarded. The Secret School Festival at Ariel Academy was a small, careful rebellion against the idea that the only meaningful forms of education are those that can be listed on a transcript. It was, instead, an education in risk and attention, in the economies of listening and the mathematics of care.