It’s not spoiling anything when I say that the tone here is set early on. Right from the get-go, the game lays its cards on the table in a way that can’t help but feel shockingly compelling: a vulnerable heroine, a foreboding path, a shocking death. Much like htoLNiQ, Yomawari excels at creating a dark, mysterious world. In terms of aesthetics, this is undeniably a good thing. Even if Yomawari isn’t officially a sequel to htoLNiQ, it certainly feels like a spiritual successor from the same developer. After all, for better and for worse, the two games seem like two halves of a whole. It seems rather appropriate that one of the options for buying Yomawari: Night Alone includes getting htoLNiQ: The Firefly Diary as part of a package deal.
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