30 Days With My Schoolrefusing Sister Final -

" " is a simulation game developed by Flash Club where you take on the role of an illustrator. The goal is to spend 30 days living with and caring for your younger sister, who has stopped attending school, to rebuild your bond through daily interactions. Final Outcomes and Gameplay

: Completing the "Great Adventure" (the 200-step trek) renders both characters infertile, blocking the Happy Family ending but unlocking unique post-game dialogue if she is still a virgin. Day 100 Ending

For most families, a school day begins with the rhythmic chaos of alarm clocks, breakfast dishes, and backpacks by the door. But for 30 days in my household, that rhythm stopped. My 14-year-old sister, once an eager student, began refusing to leave her bedroom, let alone step onto the school bus. What I initially dismissed as teenage rebellion turned out to be a complex psychological condition known as school refusal. This paper chronicles those 30 days, not as a diary of frustration, but as an informative exploration of the causes, symptoms, and interventions for school refusal—a crisis that affects between 5% and 28% of students at some point during their academic lives (Kearney, 2008). 30 days with my schoolrefusing sister final

I don’t know what happened after Maya walked into school that morning. Maybe she made it through the whole day. Maybe she called our mother after first period. Maybe she’s reading this now, months later, in a different place entirely.

That was the rawest, truest thing she had ever said. " " is a simulation game developed by

The Glass Wall: Thirty Days with My School-Refusing Sister**

: Developed using the Unity engine for PC (Windows). Day 100 Ending For most families, a school

“You’re right,” she said softly. “I’m sorry.”

My parents were relieved. I was furious. Furious that a single adult’s careless words—“You’re a waste of a desk”—had shattered my sister’s ability to learn. Furious that it took six months of truancy letters and “lazy teenager” accusations to get here.