Building a handwriting-decoding key just to read your own mentor’s medical notes is not a normal part of falling for someone, and it’s the detail from Romance MD: Always On Call that stayed with me the longest. I played as a third-year senior resident hoping to secure a placement in Orthopedic Surgery, only to be reassigned to the far more demanding Emergency ICU at Tokyo’s Seimei University Hospital. There, I found myself working under Munechika Takado, a surgeon whose reputation among the hospital staff was anything but reassuring. He is cold, dismissive, and, most damningly, branded a “murderer.”
Developed by UNICO Inc. and published by Voltage, this Steam release compiles a story that was originally delivered episodically through the Love 365 mobile app. And while the medical setting gives it a distinct identity compared to most Voltage romances, the underlying structure—and especially the monetization—felt immediately familiar from the other Love Choice titles I’ve played in the past.
Takado’s route spends its opening stretch earning real tension between him and my character rather than manufacturing it. I pushed back against his detached bedside manner for chapters before slowly discovering he was working himself to exhaustion behind the scenes, and that reveal, someone who reads as uncaring on the surface actually caring more than anyone realizes, is a familiar romance archetype on its face. The medical setting gives it specific texture though. Decoding Takado’s illegible notes by hand became its own small ritual between us, the kind of detail that made the partnership feel lived-in rather than pure romantic shorthand.
Where the pacing lost me somewhat was the romance itself. Actual romantic development doesn’t meaningfully begin until well past the route’s midpoint, in a story that stretches across dozens of chapters, and even once it arrives, it stays more restrained than I expected going in. That’s a real, deliberate trade-off. The story spends most of its length on Takado’s professional backstory and my own growth as a doctor rather than on the relationship specifically, and I landed somewhere in the middle on it, appreciating character development treated as the actual point rather than a delay tactic, while still wishing the payoff for all that investment ran a little warmer by the end.
The monetization is where my patience wore thinnest. Built around Voltage’s Love Choice system, key backstory reveals and specific choice branches get gated behind spending in-app hearts, so chasing every meaningful detail and the best possible ending pushed me toward ongoing spending rather than a single upfront purchase. That friction only sharpens against the fact that this release includes no voice acting at all, a real point of comparison against similarly priced otome titles on Steam that do include full vocal performances, and I found myself questioning more than once exactly what the asking price was paying for beyond the writing and art alone.
Character writing across the wider surgeon ensemble held up regardless of that monetization frustration. Each of the five doctors carries a distinct, well-defined archetype, and side interactions at the team’s regular hangout spot gave even routes I wasn’t actively pursuing real texture and warmth, making the EICU feel like a found-family workplace rather than a rotating cast of interchangeable love interests. Takado specifically avoids a common genre pitfall by being consistently, believably intelligent and competent rather than posturing about his own skill, which gave his gradual softening toward my character real credibility instead of reading as a simple personality flip.
Presentation carries real, if inconsistent, polish. Character art and CG work stood out throughout, and the Steam release specifically adds an opening movie and expanded adventure features not present in the original mobile app version, giving even a returning reader something new to engage with. Background music and sound design underscore the hospital’s dramatic beats effectively, shifting tone convincingly between quieter character scenes and the EICU’s higher-stakes moments, though the complete absence of voice acting remains the clearest technical gap in the package next to genre peers working at a similar price point.
Verdict
Romance MD: Always On Call delivers a well-realized medical drama and a surgeon cast worth spending real time with, anchored by Takado’s route earning its slow-burn structure through credible professional stakes rather than manufactured romantic tension. Its pacing keeps actual romance at arm’s length for most of a lengthy runtime, which will read as either refreshing restraint or real frustration depending on what you came for, and its Love Choice monetization structure, paired with a total absence of voice acting, remains a persistent friction point even for someone who enjoyed the writing itself. For otome fans specifically drawn to grounded, workplace-focused drama willing to accept both the wait for romance and the ongoing cost of chasing every meaningful choice, this delivers a substantial, well-written story.



