Content includes: suicide, gore, strangulation, dubious consent, self-harm, internalized homophobia, and mental breakdowns. It earns its 18+ rating in both sex and violence. Some routes (especially the “true” ending) get extremely dark.
The character designs are elegant and distinct, with a slightly eerie, watercolor-like quality. The soundtrack is sparse but haunting — piano tracks that linger long after you close the game. Hashihime of the Old Book Town
You’ll likely need a guide. The choices aren’t intuitive, and trial-and-error means rereading long passages. The Switch version has quality-of-life improvements, but the PC version is old-school unforgiving. Verdict 9/10 for fans of literary, dark, plot-heavy BL 6/10 for casual romance readers The character designs are elegant and distinct, with
Kawase Tamamori starts as a self-loathing, anxious writer but evolves (or unravels) across multiple timelines. His internal monologue is sharp, raw, and often heartbreaking. He’s not a passive self-insert — he makes terrible, human, desperate choices. His internal monologue is sharp
Most fans agree: Minakami’s route is the emotional core and best written. Others (like Hanada’s) feel shorter or less essential. The true route (Maki’s) is brilliant but requires enduring some repetitive scenes across prior playthroughs.