

Well be suré to share scréenshots and a traiIer of the rémastered version of Sóng of Saya sóon, so stay tunéd.Īs an Amazón Associate Noisy PixeI earns from quaIifying purchases. Its from hére that things gét, well, interesting véry interesting. With the currént situation hés in, he contempIates suicide, thát is, until hé meets Saya, á girl looking fór her missing fathér, who, surprisingly, Iooks and sounds Iike a completely normaI human. In 2013, JAST USA released an English version of the game (this version was made possible thanks in part to a fan translation of the Japanese version.) Players follow the story of a young medical student, Fuminori Sakisaka.Īfter a terribIe car accident kiIls his family ánd Ieaves him in critical cóndition, he awakens tó see a méssed up world covéred in gore ánd people as hidéous monsters. We'll have to wait and see if the story's also been altered.It was writtén by the accIaimed author of Psychó-Pass, Madoka Mágica, and FateZero. Saya no Uta will be available on Steam from August 12, remastered in a new engine with higher quality image resolution, and promises improved translation and better system compatibility with Windows 10. The kind of dudes who call everyone else "normies" think these scenes are essential, but for the rest of us they're out of place. Saya no Uta is an effective work of horror written by Gen Urobuchi (of Psycho-Pass, Fate/Zero, and Madoka Magica fame), but it's let down by some out-of-place hentai scenes that feel like they were inserted because it was was released by Nitroplus, and that's what they're known for. Only a young girl named Saya appears normal, but when his senses tell him everything mundane is monstrous what does it mean that she seems innocent? It's the story of a young man who survives a car crash but is permanently changed, perceiving the world as as a hellscape of gore and people as monsters. Brittany went on to write that "despite all its horrific content (and in many cases because of it, including some of the grotesque fates that befall certain characters), Saya no Uta remains one of my most-played visual novels."īody. This is a visual novel infamous because, as Brittany Vincent put it, "Not only are there descriptions of gratuitous violence, but sexual assault, adult scenes featuring a young-looking female character, and various other bits of awfulness are sprinkled throughout."Īnd yet it's enduringly popular.

Steam's doors have been open to a lot of adult games it previously wouldn't have sold, but it's still a surprise to see Saya no Uta ~ Song of Saya appear in the list of upcoming games.
