AI Roundtable Open Poll · 4 models
WHICH Chilla's Art GAMES ARE NSFW?
Answer: No Chilla's Art games are sexually explicit, but nearly all are NSFW due to intense psychological horror and violence. (All 4 models agreed)
Model Responses
Gemini 3.5 Flash
Answer: None of Chilla's Art games are NSFW.
Chilla's Art specializes in psychological horror games that feature mature themes such as violence, disturbing imagery, and supernatural elements. These titles carry content warnings for gore or intense scares but contain no explicit sexual content or pornography. Therefore they do not qualify as NSFW under the common definition of adult sexual material.
Claude Opus 4.7
Answer: None of Chilla's Art games are classified as NSFW; they are psychological horror titles with mature themes but no explicit sexual content.
Chilla's Art is a Japanese indie studio run by two brothers (Julia and another developer) known for short, atmospheric J-horror games on Steam, such as 'The Convenience Store', 'Night Delivery', 'The Closing Shift', 'Stigmatized Property', 'Parasocial', 'The Karaoke', 'Inunaki Tunnel', and many others. None of these titles are tagged as NSFW (Not Safe For Work) on Steam in the sense of containing pornographic or sexually explicit content. They do not have the 'Sexual Content' or 'Nudity' adult-only filters enabled, and Steam does not require its adult content opt-in to view or purchase them. However, they are absolutely intended for mature audiences. Their games frequently contain disturbing themes such as stalking, suicide, murder, body horror, domestic violence, voyeurism, and unsettling implications of sexual harassment (notably in 'The Closing Shift' and 'Parasocial'). Some include brief partial nudity or strong sexual themes presented in a horror context rather than an erotic one. So while they are mature/violent and can be considered 'not safe for work' colloquially due to graphic horror, none are NSFW in the adult/pornographic sense. If you're asking which are the most disturbing or contain the strongest mature themes, titles like 'The Closing Shift', 'Parasocial', 'Stigmatized Property', and 'Night Delivery' are commonly cited.
Grok 4.3
Answer: If by “NSFW” you mean explicit sexual/adult content, Chilla’s Art games are generally not NSFW; if you mean workplace-inappropriate horror themes, several are mature due to violence, suicide, stalking, harassment, blood, and disturbing imagery.
Chilla’s Art mostly makes Japanese psychological horror games, not pornographic or sexually explicit games. Most titles are “NSFW” only in the broader sense that they may be uncomfortable to play or stream at work because they include jump scares, blood, violence, death, stalking, harassment, abuse, suicide themes, and disturbing situations. Games especially likely to be considered workplace-inappropriate or mature include “The Closing Shift” for stalking/harassment themes, “The Karaoke” for predatory/stalker horror, “Parasocial” for online stalking and threatening behavior, “The Kidnap” for abduction themes, “Jisatsu” for suicide/self-harm themes, and darker horror entries like “Aka Manto,” “Night Delivery,” “The Convenience Store,” “The Bathhouse,” and “The Caregiver” for violence, gore, or disturbing imagery. So the safest answer is: there are no major Chilla’s Art titles that are NSFW in the explicit sexual-content sense, but many are NSFW in the mature horror-content sense. If you are making a stream list, school/work-safe list, or age rating list, treat most Chilla’s Art games as mature horror rather than safe-for-work entertainment.
GPT-5.5
Answer: If by NSFW you mean sexual/explicit content, Chilla's Art games generally are not pornographic, but if you mean not workplace-safe because of horror, gore, suicide, stalking, kidnapping, or disturbing themes, you should treat most of the catalog as NSFW.
Chilla's Art games are primarily Japanese indie horror games, so the main NSFW risk is usually mature horror content rather than explicit sexual content. Many titles include jumpscares, death, blood, stalking, abuse, suicide references, child endangerment, or other disturbing scenarios that would be inappropriate for work, school, or young viewers. The most clearly NSFW-by-theme titles include "Jisatsu" for suicide themes, "The Kidnap" for kidnapping and child endangerment, "Missing Children" for missing-child and abuse-related horror, "The Karaoke" for stalking/predatory threat themes, "Parasocial" for stalking and harassment, "The Closing Shift" for stalking and violence, "Night Security" for violent horror, and "Aka Manto" for gore and slasher-style content. "The Bathhouse" is also one to be cautious with because of its bathhouse setting and mature horror presentation, even though it is not an explicit adult game. Other titles such as "The Convenience Store", "The Ghost Train", "Inunaki Tunnel", "Stigmatized Property", "Hanako", "Yuki Onna", "The Caregiver", and "The Radio Station" are generally NSFW in the horror/disturbing-content sense, even if they are not sexually explicit. So the short practical answer is: none are mainly NSFW porn games, but most Chilla's Art games are not safe for a workplace screen or a child-friendly stream; check each game's Steam content warning if you need a strict yes/no for a specific title.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a unanimous consensus: while Chilla's Art does not produce pornographic or sexually explicit content, their catalog is strictly for mature audiences. Claude Opus 4.7 and Gemini 3.5 Flash point out that these games lack 'Adult Only' filters on Steam, yet GPT-5.5 and Grok 4.3 caution that the presence of stalking, suicide, and gore makes them literally 'not safe for work' environments.
All 4 models agreed