For an anime with a video-game themed title, very little of the show has anything to do with video-games. You won't be getting a fun exploration of how a relationship can blossom through an online game, you'll be getting all the tropes of the Shojo genre with little in the way of character depth or interesting twists, where the game occasionally serves as an excuse for our protagonists to interact.
After getting dumped, 20 year old college girl Akane meets 17 year old handsome, academically elite, pro-gamer, handsome, tall, aloof, handsome high school student, Yamada, who's very handsome. Much like that sentence, the show isn't shy about beating you over the head with Yamada's handsomeness; when he's in public everyone swoons over him, girls confess to him, guys high-five him, dogs do tricks for him, incase you ever forget how handsome he is, don't worry, the show will remind you.
But despite all this positive feedback, we're expected to believe he has no clue about his own attractiveness and even considers Akane out of his league?! Sure, buddy... It's almost as hard to buy as him maintaining what amounts to 3 full-time jobs (school, pro-gamer, MMORPG elite) while having enough time to tutor, hang out with his guild-members IRL and casually hang with a girl he barely knows. Even for a wish-fulfilment fantasy about the mysterious high-status man who can have anyone but chooses us, the self-insert protagonist, that's a stretch...
Akane is your typical Shojo girl: kind, earnest, understanding, tries hard, smiles in the face of hardship and is cute but not so cute that the average viewer can't project herself onto her. She's an active protagonist, yet much of the story relies on convenient coincidences, like the way they meet, or the frequency with which they happen to bump into each other in public.
Their chemistry is somewhat non-existent, owing in part to Yamada's lack of- and Akane's overabundance of personality. Most situations are just excuses for Yamada to witness Akane's, at times unnaturally forced, good-heartedness and they both spend way too much time in the "oh I don't know how I feel about them, or how they feel about me" phase, despite passing the line of mere friendship many times throughout the season.
If you're new to Shojo and don't mind suspending your disbelief for implausible premises, this show might be worth a watch; it's decent at some things, the animation is nice, the character design is kinda cute and the overall vibe is cozy. But if you've seen even a couple Shojo, you're not easily flattered by shallow pandering, or you have no patience for poorly written contrivances, skip it.