Also On: PS4
Publisher: PQUBE
Developer: Kadokawa Games
Medium: Digital/Vita Card
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: M
Perhaps the most surprising thing about Root Letter is how relatively normal it is. Where games like Norn9: Var Commons or Amnesia: Memories revel in their weirdness with stories about aliens and spaceships, Root Letter is essentially a mystery novel โ and a well-written, engaging one at that.
Whatโs more, itโs got a sense of class and elegance that you donโt normally associate with the visual novel genre in general. Maybe Iโve just played the wrong games, but when I think of visual novels, I think of confusing tales of romance and high school students, not โ as is the case here โ of a middle-aged man trying to track down the truth about his one-time pen pal. Itโs kind of refreshing to play one of these games and not come away from it feeling vaguely pervy.
Credit for that, of course, goes back to the fact that Root Letter is fairly well-written, with a well-paced plot that starts off with an explosive reveal (you discover an unopened letter from 15 years earlier, in which your pen pal confesses that she killed someone), and just builds from there. There arenโt many games that even attempt to play around with the idea of an unreliable narrator, so to see it used here โ and to such interesting effect, too โ is refreshing.
I donโt think the game is hurt by the fact that it adds in a few flourishes here and there that mean itโs not 100% a visual novel, at least in the strictest sense of the term. There are points where Root Letter borrows from the adventure genre, and makes you search around an environment to find the clues you need. Thereโs an ever-growing map that you need to keep track of, as your search constantly leads you to new places all over town. Thereโs even a weird little minigame centred around timing your responses correctly, but Iโd be lying if I said I understood it.
Ultimately, though, all of these flourishes are in support of advancing the novelโs story. And as I said, itโs one heck of a compelling story, which means that all of them do their job. In fact, everything about Root Letter seems to do its job of making it a good, worthwhile gameโฆwhich, in turn, is why itโs most definitely worth a look.