Fake Family puts you in the shoes of Trevis, a failed wannabe criminal who fakes being Taylor's brother to escape his past. With Chloe's help, he hides in plain sight—but the deception quickly becomes a game of corruption. Your goal? Seduce and corrupt Taylor and her entire family from the inside.
From Failure to Deception—The Setup
1. Chloe18 Back to Class left off with Chloe needing to clean up her reputation, making everyone believe Taylor was the real problem. Now Fake Family flips the script entirely. You step into the shoes of Trevis, a guy who tried to play the tough criminal just to impress a girl—and failed so miserably that he needs a place to disappear. The setup is pure Chloe18: messy, ironic, and full of bad decisions that somehow feel like the only options available.
2. Chloe, ever the schemer, comes up with the perfect cover: Trevis will pose as Taylor's brother. What starts as a hiding spot quickly reveals itself as something far more dangerous—and far more tempting. The family welcomes him with open arms, never suspecting that the "brother" they've taken in has a very different agenda. The game excels at making you feel like you're getting away with something, even as the walls start closing in.
3. But Trevis isn't content to simply lie low. The whole point of this charade, as the game makes clear from the start, is to corrupt Taylor and her entire family. Not that you'd want to resist, anyway. The narrative hooks you early with its blend of dark humor and genuine tension—every conversation feels like a step deeper into a trap you're setting for yourself as much as for them.
Multiple Paths, One Corrupting Goal
1. The game offers surprising freedom in how you approach your mission. Do you work methodically, building trust with each family member before making your move? Or do you push hard and fast, risking exposure for the sake of quicker results? The choices you make ripple through the story, unlocking different scenes and altering how each character responds to you. There's no single "right" way to play—experimentation is actively encouraged.
2. Community discussions frequently highlight the two most direct routes through the game: the "pure Mom route" and the "pure Gwen route". Each path ensures you see all currently available content while tailoring the experience to your preferred target. Players have mapped out dialogue trees, gift strategies, and timing windows to maximize their corruption efforts—and the community continues to discover new approaches with each update.
3. The game doesn't punish you for taking your time. In fact, some of the most rewarding scenes only unlock if you've built enough rapport before making your intentions clear. The balance between maintaining the brother facade and pushing your real agenda creates a constant, delicious tension. You're always one wrong word away from being exposed—and that's exactly where Fake Family wants you.
Mature Storytelling with a Twisted Sense of Humor
1. As an 18+ title, Fake Family doesn't shy away from adult themes, but it delivers them with a knowing wink. The game understands that the premise is absurd—a failed criminal pretending to be someone's brother while systematically corrupting their family—and it leans into that absurdity without losing sight of the stakes. The writing balances genuine heat with moments of dark comedy, making the whole experience feel less like a pure corruption sim and more like a twisted sitcom you can't stop watching.
2. The Chloe18 series has always been about curious, sexually adventurous characters navigating complicated situations, and Fake Family continues that tradition with some of the series' most confident writing yet. The dialogue is sharp, the character reactions feel earned, and the game never forgets that the best corruption stories are the ones where the corruptor starts to lose themselves in the process. By the time you're deep into the family's dynamics, it's hard to tell who's really using whom.
3. For fans of the series, this installment offers a fresh perspective on a familiar world—you're not playing as Chloe this time, but she's very much present, pulling strings from the sidelines. For newcomers, Fake Family works as a standalone entry with enough context to get you up to speed. Either way, you're in for a ride that's as uncomfortable as it is compelling, with scenes that linger long after you've closed the game.



