Strap into Marty McFly’s shoes—literally—in this raucous parody where time travel isn’t just about fixing the past; it’s about rewriting your love life. After accidentally warping to 1955, you’ll juggle steamy dates with multiple women across Hill Valley’s nostalgic backdrop, all while dodging paradoxes, jealous rivals, and the consequences of your own libido.
Time-Travel Mechanics with a Twist
1. DeLorean as Your Wingman: The iconic time machine isn’t just for hopping decades—it’s your ultimate dating toolkit. Use its flux capacitor to rewind awkward moments (like calling a girl by her future daughter’s name) or fast-forward through dull small talk. But misuse it, and you’ll trigger "chrono-cringe": glitches like showing up to a date naked or with retro-future slang that baffles everyone
2. 1950s Authenticity… Mostly: Explore a vibrantly reimagined Hill Valley, where sock hops, drive-ins, and malt shops set the stage for romance. Historical accuracy takes a backseat to humor—expect jukeboxes that play 80s power ballads and diner menus with "avocado toast" decades ahead of its time
3. Butterfly Effect Dating: Every flirtation reshapes the timeline. Save a cheerleader from Biff’s harassment? She might crush on you. But steal her from her destined sweetheart, and you’ll return to 1985 to find her grandson running a revenge cult against your family
Dating Sim Meets Chaos Engine
1. Multi-Route Romance System: Pursue five distinct love interests—each with era-specific quirks:
- Betty the Bombshell: A Marilyn Monroe-esque starlet who’ll ghost you if your "future talk" spoils her film career.
- Edna the Rebel: A beatnik poet testing your "cool" with jazz haikus; fail, and she’ll sabotage your DeLorean.
- Clara the Heiress: Her family’s fortune hinges on a key event; romance her too well, and you’ll erase your own hometown
2. Time-Management Minigames: Balance dates across timelines using a "Temporal Planner." Overbook? You’ll literally clone yourself to attend two dances at once—until clones start rivaling you for affection. Sync schedules poorly, and you’ll face a "Paradox Standoff": two girls confronting you in the same alley
3. Consequence-Driven Seduction: Choices during dates alter character models and dialogue trees. Compliment Betty’s intelligence? She ditches Hollywood for science, rocking 50s lab goggles in later scenes. Push her toward stardom? She’ll demand you leak Back to the Future’s plot to make her a producer
Characters & Parody Depth
1. Marty 2.0: Voiced with sarcastic swagger, this Marty’s less "heroic teen" and more "opportunistic horndog." His guitar skills now unlock seduction perks—play "Johnny B. Goode" poorly, and crowds boo; nail it, and women toss room keys onstage
2. Doc Brown’s "Research": The scientist’s new "libido enhancer" gadget backfires spectacularly. His lab now features a "Kama Sutra Time Chart" and inventions like the "Passion-o-Meter"—which short-circuits when you kiss, plunging the town into darkness
3. Biff’s Incel Era: 1955’s bully isn’t just a thug—he’s a proto-"nice guy" who whines about "friend zones." Sabotage his schemes by setting him up with his future wife… or watch him found an anti-Marty hate group that time-travels to troll you



