My Private: Secretary 2

4.7
Developer Olympus Platforms Linux, Mac OS, Windows Genres Visual Novel

My Private: Secretary 2 – No Plot, No Problem

Let’s be real for a second. Sometimes you don’t want a sprawling RPG with branching dialogue trees, relationship meters, and a dozen endings that require a walkthrough to unlock. Sometimes you just want a dedicated, animated fantasy that gets down to business without pretending it’s a visual novel about office politics. My Private: Secretary 2 gets that. It’s not here to waste your time with character development or complicated choices. It’s here to deliver a POV session with a bespectacled secretary whose only job is to take orders.

And honestly? That’s refreshing.

What You Actually Get

This isn’t a dating sim where you have to grind affection points. You pick a location, pick a position, and watch the animations roll. There are six different backdrops and eight sexual activities to cycle through, which sounds limited but actually covers a solid range: oral, vaginal, anal, some foot action, and the classic doggy style finale. The game brags about over 70 animated sequences, and that’s not a lie—though it’s important to note these are packed into about five minutes of non-looping video files. You’re not getting a hundred hours of content here. This is a quick, concentrated blast of visual stimulation.

The standout mechanic is the “heart button.” You press it when you want the cumshot to happen. Simple, but it makes a difference. Instead of watching a pre-rendered loop that repeats forever, you actually control the climax. It’s a small touch that turns a passive viewing into something that feels interactive—like you’re directing the scene rather than just spectating.

The Technical Bits (Not Boring, I Swear)

  • 73 high-res renders spread across the encounters.
  • 9 movie files adding up to roughly 5 minutes of unlooped animation.
  • System requirements are modest: 1080p monitor, an i5 processor, and a discrete GPU. No need to upgrade your rig for this one.

It runs smooth on mid-tier hardware. No crashes, no stuttering. Just clean 3D models doing what they do best.

The Character, Because She’s the Whole Point

The secretary model is the star here. Thick, glasses, submissive attitude—she’s designed to hit that specific power fantasy note. The animations are crisp, the lighting is decent, and the facial expressions do enough to sell the scenario. You won’t mistake this for a AAA cinematic experience, but for a focused adult game, it’s well above the usual Steam asset-flip nonsense. The renders are static images, but the animated clips are where the game shines. Watching her go from playful teasing to full-on servicing is exactly what you’d expect, no surprises, no disappointments.

One minor gripe: there’s no voice acting. It’s all visual. Some people might prefer a little audio spice, but the silence keeps the focus on the action. Your mileage may vary.

Is It Worth Your Time?

If you’re looking for a My Private: Secretary 2 walkthrough to figure out secret routes or hidden endings, stop. There are none. This is a straight shooter—no branching paths, no dialogue choices, no complex mechanics. The only interaction is selecting your scene and hitting that heart button when you’re ready. That’s it. And that’s fine.

For what it is—a no-nonsense POV experience with solid 3D renders and enough positional variety to keep things interesting for a few sessions—it delivers. The animations are smooth, the character model is appealing, and the heart button gimmick adds just enough interactivity to feel involved. It’s not trying to be a visual novel or an RPG. It’s a simple, effective tool for a specific purpose.

My Private: Secretary 2 doesn’t pretend to be art. It’s a product, and it knows what it sells. You either want a quick, animated secretary fantasy or you don’t. If you do, this is a solid pick. If you need a story, romance, and character arcs… go play a dating sim. This one’s for the people who just want to press a button and watch the fireworks.

About this game

Developer
Olympus
Release date
January 1, 2020
Platforms
Languages
English
Rating
4.7