Sure,
it’s
not
straight-up
horror
as
the
early
teasers
suggested,
but
even
still,
Emio
—
The
Smiling
Man
is
among
the
darkest
games
Nintendo
has
ever
made.
It’s
a
murder
mystery
that
doesn’t
skimp
on
the
murder
and
throws
in
an
unsettling
urban
legend
for
good
measure.
More
than
that,
though,
it’s
just
a
really
great
mystery
on
a
platform
that
has
steadily
become
an
ideal
home
for
them.
Emio
is
actually
the
continuation
of
a
decades-old
franchise
from
Nintendo
called
Famicom
Detective
Club.
Created
by
Metroid
designer
Yoshio
Sakamoto,
the
games
originally
never
launched
outside
of
Japan,
until
a
pair
of
surprise
remakes
hit
the
Switch
in
2021.
Emio
is
the
first
entirely
new
entry
in
the
franchise
since
the
late
’80s
—
but
even
still,
not
a
lot
has
changed.
As
with
its
predecessors,
Emio
plays
out
like
a
visual
novel,
where
your
actions
are
determined
by
a
series
of
verbs
on
a
menu.
This
is
how
you
“look”
at
a
crime
scene
or
“ask”
a
witness
questions
or
“review”
your
notes.
Sometimes,
the
actions
are
contextual
—
you
can’t
talk
to
someone
if
there’s
no
one
there
—
but
there
are
almost
always
a
few
things
you
can
do
at
any
given
moment.
If
not,
you
can
always
“think.”
It’s
not
the
most
elegant
way
to
engage
with
the
world,
but
it
is
functional.
It
also
necessitates
a
lot
of
reading
and
repetition.
You
often
have
to
press
witnesses
by
asking
the
same
questions
over
and
over,
and
the
only
way
to
learn
what
happened
is
to
listen
to
people.
That
combination
is
something
of
an
acquired
taste,
and
also
one
that
only
really
works
with
the
right
narrative
—
which
is
where
Emio
shines.
The
game
tells
the
story
of
a
series
of
murders
involving
a
killer
who
both
wears
a
paper
bag
with
a
creepy
smiley
face
and
also
puts
one
on
his
victims.
At
the
outset
of
the
game,
a
recent
killing
appears
to
connect
to
a
series
of
murders
18
years
prior
and
also
possibly
ties
into
an
urban
legend
about
a
person
named
Emio
who
kills
with
nearly
identical
methods.
You
play
as
a
young
assistant
of
a
private
investigator,
working
alongside
the
police
to
put
the
various
pieces
together.
Because
there
are
so
many
moving
parts
and
—
at
first
—
only
loose
theories
holding
them
together,
I
had
a
lot
of
fun
doing
all
of
the
asking,
looking,
and
reviewing.
It’s
very
satisfying
when
things
click
into
place.
There
are
plentiful
threads
to
pull
on,
which
shift
the
story
into
even
darker
and
more
disturbing
directions
as
the
scope
becomes
clear.
Even
without
the
horror
element,
there’s
plenty
to
be
creeped
out
about
in
Emio.
The
game
also
joins
a
sizable
lineup
of
similar
mysteries
on
the
Switch,
which
feel
right
at
home
due
to
its
portable
nature,
like
the
video
game
equivalent
of
a
good
book.
Outside
of
Famicom
Detective
Club,
there’s
Ace
Attorney,
Murder
by
Numbers,
or
Coffee
Talk,
to
name
a
few.
Emio’s
gameplay
might
feel
a
touch
dated
in
comparison,
but
its
core
mystery
carries
it
through.
Emio
—
The
Smiling
Man:
Famicom
Detective
Club
is
available
now
on
the
Nintendo
Switch.
Original author: Andrew Webster
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