Shuten Order by developer DMM Games and publisher Spike Chunsoft—Nintendo Switch review written by Richard with a copy provided by the publisher.
Estimated reading time: 7 minutes
Do you
believe in God? Or do you pray for the end of humanity? Are you part of the
Shuten Order, or one of those violent heretics? Well, those aren’t important
right now. What is important is finding the murderer of the Founder of the
Order and saving humanity!
Shuten
Order is an interesting game that slaps five different genres together and
actually does it pretty decently. The main premise of Shuten Order is that you
awaken in a strange hotel room and are told by two self professed angels you must investigate the death of
the founder of the local cult: Shuten. Well, more of a sort of city-state
really, and as far as cults go they aren’t that bad. The religious doctrines
include no violence and no murder, so crime is surprisingly low. Unfortunately,
the founder of Shuten has been brutally dismembered. It is up to you to
discover who the murderer is!
Shuten
Order is a bit of a quirky game, but not necessarily in a bad way. You get told
at the beginning of the game by two characters calling themselves angels that
you, despite your recent memory loss, are in fact the dismembered founder. Not
only that, but God has issued you a trial to find your own murderer. Luckily
for you, you can use the power of God to help. Despite Shuten being an
anti-religious religious cult. Hmmm, well, hopefully you can figure out what’s
up with that as things progress. You will be given a directive to use the power
of God to determine who the murderer is, and then investigate them and force
them to confess to their crimes.
It is at
this point that the genre of Shuten Order is tossed in a salad spinner. Whoever
you select as the culprit will determine what the gameplay style is like. So,
when investigating the five ministers who are the most likely culprits behind
your death, you must also think of what kind of gameplay you prefer. You do go
through all five routes for the full experience, so don’t worry about
restarting to choose another route. They do all interrelate to varying degrees
as well.
The
different gameplay types, from left to right in the options, are: murder
mystery/investigation, “extreme escape game”, multi-perspective, romantic (?),
and survival escape. Let’s break each of these down a little so you have an
idea what’s what with each genre type. In the murder mystery option you will be
following the Minister of Justice to a rich family’s private island in order to
read a will. Once there, you discover a murder has taken place. You are tasked
with investigating the murder. Gameplay is a lot of interacting with objects
and asking people questions. You can do a fancy finger snap to try and draw
connections to important topics, but too much snapping makes you look dumb and
you’ll lose trust. There are also debate segments where you must prove your
suspicions. Kind of similar to Phoenix Wright in style, just less courthouse.
Next up we
have the “extreme escape game”. Notice the quotation marks. While this is
generally marketed as an escape game style route while investigating the
Minister of Health, it’s largely walking around an empty area doing the
occasional puzzle minigame until the end when you get an actual escape room.
Just wanted to let you know so you aren’t as disappointed as I was in the
gameplay. The story and world building reveals were outstanding, but the
gameplay was a bit of a slog.
Multi-perspective
is pretty much traditional visual novel fare. You make choices which will
change outcomes, which will then open up new paths for different characters.
The game doesn’t really tell you this, but after your first dead end you can
open the flowchart for the routes yourself instead of at the end of a route to
go back and make other choices. Honestly I thought this was going to be the
most boring route when I started, but I was pleasantly mistaken.
For the
investigation into the ministry of Education you have a romantic (?) adventure.
Basically think traditional dating sim, where you need to raise affection with
different characters to unlock their ending route. Yes that question mark is
there for a reason, no I won’t say why, yes it’s actually in the game itself
too. Once again I thought this route would be sort of boring, and if you rush
through it it kind of is, but there is SO MUCH in this route that isn’t laid
out for you that makes it really great. Over the course of this route, you can
learn a bunch of interesting facts about the other routes and characters as
they’re progressing. There are allusions to a lot of other interesting details
that were really neat to learn. A plus for the subtle world building.
The final
entry is survival escape with the Minister of Security. Short story is it’s very
much like Corpse Party. Long story, you have to escape from a serial killer by
dropping shutters to slow them down, hiding in safety lockers, and solving
puzzles while you’re getting chased in a 3D isometric perspective. It isn’t
super complicated, but it was a lot more active than any of the other routes.
At the end
you can put your knowledge of all the routes together for one final shot at salvation.
All routes feature a checkpoint system where you can retry if you get a game
over from the nearest “checkpoint”, so you don’t really need to worry about
making twenty seven different save files, unless you want to see the
differences between different options. Each route has it’s own focus for
delving into the world. One route may explain what the power of God actually is,
another gives insight into the relationship between God, the heretics, and
Shuten, and another sets up some important background about the murder of the
Founder as well as how Shuten functions as a whole. Also, at least three of the
routes will drop a tactical nuke equivalent of a reveal on you by the end that
may have you sitting there gaping for at least five minutes if you haven’t
played other routes that hint towards it.
As a whole
I’d say Shuten Order is a pretty artistic game in a lot of ways. It divests
from the standard genre typing, has a weird introspective on society and
religion while lamp-shading a lot of common tropes, and flips a few overused
concepts. The art style used is a bit of a mash-up as well, with both 3D and 2D
segments, standard visual novel style talking and scenes, but with interactable
characters showing as sort of paper cut-outs to interact with before dialogue
starts. The music is also kind of all over the place, from tense tones in the
extreme escape game and survival segments, to more laidback in the
multi-perspective and romantic (?) routes. Really, Shuten Order is a wonky
stained-glass style of everything that it does. Gotta give them props for
sticking to an overarching theme.
Shuten
Order certainly isn’t without it’s faults. There are some text wrapping issues,
one soft-lock I found in the Minister of Justice route, and some misplaced text
options, but nothing wildly egregious, most of which I’m sure will be patched
out on release. Shuten Order also suffers from the same thing most multi-genre
style games do: the gameplay isn’t really fully fleshed out. It feels like
Shuten Order tried to do too many things at once and couldn’t adequately make
all of them feel “full”, for lack of a better word. Does the gameplay work
fine? Well, yeah, but it doesn’t feel complete either. Like it could be better
but it wasn’t fully fleshed out, or the route ended before it could really take
off. Nothing is “incomplete”, but it does all mostly feel like if there was the
leeway to afford more effort in certain gameplay areas it would be appreciated.
Shuten
Order is a really interesting title. It blends a variety of different genres
with some really interesting world building in a high stakes murder mystery.
While the individual genre routes may have benefitted from a more single genre
focused approach, it is a very unique way of bridging together the overarching
storyline. Shuten Order is definitely a title I’d suggest taking an interest
in, although it is a very niche title.
Score: 8 / 10













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