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Showing posts with label Tokyo Dark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tokyo Dark. Show all posts

Tokyo Dark: Remembrance - Switch Review


Do you like gritty crime noir stories? A taste of the supernatural? Point and click adventures? Well then, now that Tokyo Dark has graced the Switch with it’s presence, you can have all this too, and on the go!

Tokyo Dark is an adventure mystery sort of visual novel style game, where you play as Ayami Itō, a detective working in the Tokyo police department. After her partner disappears, she delves into the dark underbelly of Tokyo to bring him back, and it isn’t the “criminal” kind of dark, either. You guide detective Itō through the dark and supernatural, the creepy businessmen, and the cat-atonically wonderful cat café’s, all in search of answers.


Gameplay is both rather simple yet sort of complicated at the same time. While the core mechanics are pretty much point and click, the SPIN system gives a nice twist on the experience. As you guide Itō around Tokyo, little boxes pop up that you can use to interact to with your environment. These boxes allow you choices, usually “look” or “investigate”, and are how you interact with both objects and people, with up to four choices that you push in a cardinal direction to choose. The vast majority of choices will affect one of your SPIN stats, which are Sanity, Professionalism, Investigation, and Neurosis. If those don’t give you an indicator as to how this game is gonna go, not too much more will. Different options will be given to you when investigating or making choices based on where your stats fall upon the gauge, which can be checked by accessing your menu if you need to check them.

What Tokyo Dark has that really sets it apart though is that all your choices and decisions feel like they really matter. With every action affecting your stats both negatively and positively, you really need to think about what you want to do. Even just examining things over and over again, or walking back and forth between the same areas too much can increase your neurosis, making you susceptible to larger hits to your sanity when something spooky happens. Compounding this, the game autosaves after basically everything, meaning unless you want to restart from the very beginning, your choices really do matter. With the option of simply loading a save file to try a different option, at least during your first playthrough, it gives a much greater weight to the choices you make, giving a feeling of truly “owning” your in-game decisions. With everything you do being permanent after it happens, you really start to evaluate your choices.


Like the original PC release, there are little cat statue things to collect, although it took me way too long to figure out it was the ‘X’ button that collected them. Admittedly it felt a little off not being able to at least tap the cats, but at least it makes the really hidden ones a bit easier to collect. The music is creepy when it needs to be, and lighthearted when it should be. When you’re exploring the creepy areas, the music gives you a sense of dread or worry, and the artstyle is really nice and vivid. The animations are pretty well done, and they even have a few fully animated cutscenes as well.

Overall, I really loved Tokyo Dark Remembrance. The feel of having your choices permanent with the constant autosave really gives weight to your choices, and the story and characters are really interesting. The artstyle is well done and the backgrounds are really well done. The story was engaging and with more than ten possible endings, there’s a lot of replayability value. Tokyo Dark is a game I almost instantly got hooked on, and with good reason too. I had a great time delving into the depths of Tokyo, and I hope you do too.

Game Information

Platform:
Nintendo Switch
Developer(s):
Cherrymochi
Publisher(s):
Unties
Genre(s):
Point and Click, Visual Novel
Mode(s):
Single Player
Other Platform(s):
PC

Source:
Provided by Publisher




Article by Richard
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Tokyo Dark heading to consoles! - News


Having originally released last year, Tokyo Dark became one of Richard's GotY entries for 2017. Now heading over to the consoles, it looks like we'll get another chance to dive into this noire-esque point and click adventure with Tokyo Dark - Remembrance - later this year for both the Switch and the PS4.




Aug. 6, 2018
Sony Music Entertainment Japan / UNTIES

We are announcing TOKYO DARK -Remembrance-, a Director's Cut of fan-favorite PC mystery adventure TOKYO DARK, featuring all-new story chapters.

TOKYO DARK -Remembrance-


Deep below the sewers of Tokyo, there is a door. All who enter are lost forever... 

The original version of the mystery adventure game TOKYO DARK was released on Steam in September 2017.

Its unique story and artwork, a hallmark of developer Cherrymochi's style, won the hearts of countless fans both within and beyond Japan.

TOKYO DARK -Remembrance- completes the mysteries left by the original, bringing a Director's Cut of this masterpiece to Nintendo Switch™ and PlayStation®4 this winter.

As protagonist Detective Itō, you will explore Tokyo searching for your missing partner. Can you bring light to the dark horrors lying beneath this metropolis?
Will you lose your mind doing so... or worse?

Description 

Tokyo Dark is an anime-style horror adventure game. The story follows Detective Itō across Tokyo, searching for the truth behind her partner's strange disappearance. Featuring puzzles, stat management, and difficult decisions, Tokyo Dark puts the narrative in the hands of the player. Players' decisions change Itō's character, opening or locking options and leading to more than 10 different endings, including new ones added in this special edition.

History 

In January 2015 Tokyo Dark was submitted to the Square Enix Collective where it achieved an incredible 94% rating by the Collective members and was later Greenlit on Steam. Following that, the game had a successful Kickstarter campaign in summer 2015, and it was later announced it would be published by the Square Enix Collective. Tokyo Dark released for PC on Steam 7 September 2017.

Features

  • Branching story with more than 10 different endings (including a New Game+ exclusive ending).
  • Difficult decisions - every action affects Detective Itō's attributes and options.
  • Beautiful anime-style character art, with locations inspired by real locations in Tokyo.
  • Original soundtrack by Reign of Fury frontman Matt 'Bison' Steed.
  • Animated sequences produced by Graphinica, a world-class animation studio.
  • Localization by Japanese novelist Ureshino Kimi.
  • The S.P.I.N (Sanity, Professionalism, Investigation, Neurosis) system keeps track of every decision you make, changing how other characters react and the actions available to you.

About UNTIES

Based out of Tokyo, Japan, Sony Music's publishing label Unties Games is dedicated to expanding the reach of Japan's best indie developers. Their name derives from their goal of untying games from specific platforms and sharing them worldwide.

About Cherrymochi

Cherrymochi is an independent game studio that aims to bridge Japanese and Western game design. Based near Tokyo, Japan, they are inspired by Japanese pop culture, anime aesthetic and Western adventure games. The studio's international team members are from five different countries and pools their multicultural experience to make story-focused games for an international audience. Cherrymochi's first game, Tokyo Dark, was released Sept. 7 2017.


Article by Pierre-Yves
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