Vaporum


It always begins with a man and a lighthouse… We play as a man with no memories who washes up on at a tower in the middle of the ocean. Upon entering, he finds a retro-futuristic steampunk dystopia that, based on audiologs scattered throughout the facility, appears to have resulted from the study of a mysterious miracle substance gone wrong. In other words, it’s… Vaporum!

Operencia: The Stolen Sun


Operencia: The Stolen Sun is a first-person grid-based dungeon crawler, which readers of the blog may already know that I love. While Legend of Grimrock is focused purely on exploration, combat, and puzzles, Operencia is a bit more well-rounded, with actual characters and story, and a more fleshed-out combat system. Unfortunately that doesn’t mean Operencia was better. It was fun, but it wasn’t great—it held itself back. But we’ll get to that.

Murderer vs. Maniac / 殺人犯 対 殺人鬼

While some books take a while to get into the action, Murderer vs. Maniac wastes no time. The opening scene is all about the protagonist killing someone!

...Wait, what?

Six Pork Cutlets / 六枚のとんかつ


Feeling hungry? Six Pork Cutlets is a baka-mys short story collection that won the third Mephisto prize, so as you could probably expect from that those pieces of information, it... has a bit of a different flavor than you might expect.

Those Who Cast a Curse Like the Headless / 首無の如き祟るもの

And so we arrive at the third book in the Genya Toujou series. The previous two books provided a wonderful blend of J-horror, murder mystery, and folklore, and Those Who Cast a Curse Like the Headless is supposed to be a contender of the peak of the series. So does this book have enough to take the crown, or is it getting ahead of itself?

Who Inside / 封印再度


Who Inside
is the fifth book in the Saikawa & Moe (or, as I prefer, S&M) series. It’s ten books total, so we’re halfway through! (…Ignoring the fact that I never reviewed The Perfect Insider on this blog.) Anyway, the S&M series has a heavy dose of STEM, which I’ve always assumed would result in mechanical and stuffy mysteries, but Mori continues to play around with structure and convention. While the book gets a bit weird and might be a fair deal longer than it really needs to be, the core trick is great and enough for me to view the piece favorably. (That sentence, coincidentally, can also serve as my Perfect Insider review.)

Death Within the Evil Eye / 魔眼の匣の殺人


It’s difficult to succeed genius. Chrono Cross isn’t as good as Chrono Trigger, Bioshock 2 isn’t as good as Bioshock, and National Treasure 2—okay, that one is basically perfect. When you create something truly special, you’ve set a high bar for yourself, which makes it that much more difficult to overcome. And yet Death Within the Evil Eye… succumbs to this pitfall, as it’s good, but just doesn’t quite have the same magic as Death Among the Undead.

Chrono Cross / クロノ・クロス

Chrono Trigger is a stunning masterpiece with beautiful pixel graphics, engaging gameplay, fantastic music, memorable characters, and a well-paced, well-constructed time travel story. It's no wonder it's hailed by many as one of the, if not the, greatest video games of all time, and it's fully deserving of such exemplary accolades.

Chrono Cross, its sequel, is fine.

The Silver Case / シルバー事件

The Silver Case takes place in 1999 in the (fictional) 24th Ward of Tokyo, where the murderer Kamui Uehara committed the titular Silver Case twenty years prior. He's thought to now be harmless, until he escapes from the mental hospital at which he's being detained. We play as the unnamed sole survivor of the unit first dispatched to recover Kamui, who then finds himself swept up into the 24th Ward's Heinous Crimes Unit, which investigates... heinous crimes.

Chronos: Before the Ashes


When playing Chronos: Before the Ashes, my initial impression was that it’s basically baby’s first Souls-like, although as I dwelled upon it, I began to wonder… Is Chronos even a Souls-like? While “Souls-like” is a famously nebulous sub-genre, Chronos certainly feels like a Souls-like on the surface. It’s an action RPG with a stamina system and penalty for dying. That’s enough for a Souls-like! Right?

The Man Who Died Seven Times / 七回死んだ男


After Evelyn Hardcastle died seven and a half times, dying seven times just doesn’t seem that impressive…

The protagonist of The Man Who Died Seven Times is Hisatarou Ooba (although, due to a quirk in the Japanese language, pretty much everyone calls him Kyuutarou instead). He has a special… condition. Every so often (about four times a month) he falls into a “repetition pitfall” where he experiences the same day nine times until he finally moves onto the next day for real. The “repetition pitfalls” are completely random, and Kyuutarou has no control over when they happen. In fact, he can’t realize he’s in one until the day loops the first time. Each day loops exactly from midnight to midnight, and the day fully resets each loop with nobody’s memories carrying over except Kyuutarou’s. Additionally, only the ninth, final loop carries over into the next “real” day. 

Anyway, Kyuutarou is part of a rich family embroiled in an inheritance dispute (because of course he is). Grandpa is a rich jerk (because of course he is) with three daughters. The middle daughter helped build and run the company but is a spinster, while the older daughter (Kyuutarou’s mom) and younger daughter are both in financial straits (because of course they are) and so are desperately maneuvering to make one of their kids the heir to the family fortune. 

Since Kyuutarou’s family is weird and dysfunctional, him and his cousins only visit Grandpa once per year, at New Year’s. On January 2, the last day of the visit, Kyuutarou gets caught by Grandpa and is forced to spend all day drinking with him. (Kyuutarou is a high school freshman, by the way.) When Kyuutarou wakes up “the next day” still at Grandpa’s house, he realizes he’s fallen into a repetition pitfall. He can’t stand spending the next eight days straight getting blackout drunk, so he stealthily avoids Grandpa that day… only for the family to later discover Grandpa’s dead, with his head smashed in. 

Oh no! Anyway…