9.5/10 — One of the finest narrative horror games of the 2020s. Don’t let the visual-novel format fool you. It’s better. Much better. Play it on: Nintendo Switch, PC (Steam), iOS/Android. Headphones mandatory. Lights optional—but recommended off.
What makes the narrative superior is its branching, non-linear structure. You don’t just choose dialogue options; you jump between characters’ perspectives, often in the middle of their death sequences. A decision made as one character (say, the cynical detective Shigeyuki Kano) will lock or unlock a path for another (the grieving father Shogo Okiie). The game actively encourages failure —dying as a protagonist isn’t a game-over screen; it’s a clue. You are meant to chart deaths across a narrative flowchart, using your knowledge from one doomed timeline to save another character in a parallel branch. paranormasight the seven mysteries of honjotenoke better
This restraint produces a lingering dread that pure gore cannot achieve. It’s the horror of implication—the fear that the curse is watching you through the screen. In that sense, PARANORMASIGHT understands that the human imagination is a better horror engine than any GPU. The title references the real-life “Seven Mysteries of Honjo,” a set of urban legends from the Honjo district of Tokyo (e.g., the “Obori no Kanpei,” the “Drum Bridge,” etc.). Most games would use these as superficial flavor text—easter eggs for tourists. PARANORMASIGHT instead builds its entire curse system around them. Much better
It is better than most horror games because it doesn’t try to be a game first. It tries to be an exorcism—a ritual that loops you, the player, into its dark logic and forces you to make impossible choices. If you haven’t played it, stop reading reviews and go in blind. Allow yourself to fail. Let the curses unfold. And when you finally close the game, you’ll realize you’ve not just finished a story. You’ve been changed by one. Lights optional—but recommended off
In a gaming landscape saturated with bloated open worlds, live-service grinds, and jump-scare-heavy horror titles that vanish from memory as quickly as their cheap thrills, a quiet masterpiece emerged in March 2023. PARANORMASIGHT: The Seven Mysteries of Honjo —developed by Square Enix’s little-known Team Full on—was released with a whisper, not a bang. On the surface, it looks like a niche visual novel with retro filters and a peculiar name. But to dismiss it as “just another walking sim with text” is to miss one of the most tightly crafted, emotionally resonant, and mechanically ingenious horror-mystery games ever made.