You won’t find any combat, set-pieces or gunplay in Yomawari: Night Alone instead using your wits to avoid the various ghostly creatures you’ll come up against along the way. The game does an excellent job at taking the prospect of a survival horror game and stripping it back to its core. To some extent the small town you’ll be exploring throughout your journey feels at times open world-esque with optional objectives to carry out and puzzles to complete, but generally Yomawari: Night Alone sets you on a linear creep-tastic adventure that is well suited to a handheld system. Throughout this bleak and atmospheric adventure, you play as an unnamed girl who’s tasked with the simple objective of finding your sister during the course of one fateful night, handily played out across seven bitesize chapters. You see, Yomawari: Night Alone is a somewhat unconventional survival horror game in the sense that, unlike the big-budget and bombastic AAA franchises in the genre, it tells a relatively small yet personal tale uniquely from an isometric perspective. Colourful, welcoming, uplifting and delightful: all words that I wouldn’t use to describe Yomawari: Night Alone, the latest Vita game from longstanding Japanese developer Nippon Ichi Software.
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