Compara los precios de The Witch's House MV en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Fummy. Publicado por DANGEN Entertainment. Lanzado el 30/10/2018. Disponible en PC, Mac, Xbox. Géneros: Adventure, Casual, Indie, RPG.

Proof that a solo developer with pixel art and a merciless save system can outfear most studio-budget horror games. Plan for two hours of dying, and stay for the twist that changes everything you thought you understood.

I keep a small mental shelf for games that prove handcraft matters more than budget, and The Witch's House MV has occupied a permanent spot on it since I first watched Let's Plays of the original freeware release years ago. Fummy built the 2012 version alone in RPG Maker VX, and the MV remake represents five times the development hours poured back in: fully redrawn 16-bit tilesets, new character sprites, revised audio cues, and two new difficulty settings that simply did not exist in the free release. The result is one of those rare remakes where the craft upgrade feels earned rather than cosmetic. The structure is pure old-school adventure logic: top-down exploration of a multi-floor manor, environmental puzzles solved by finding items and placing them in the right locations, and absolutely zero combat. There are no hit points that matter in any practical sense. What there is instead is a house that wants to kill Viola in the most inventive ways it can devise. Spike traps. A life-sized toy soldier with a rifle. A giant stuffed bear that pursues you through rooms. Airborne blades preceded by a half-second of audio warning. The game broadcasts its philosophy immediately: you will die often, and the deaths themselves are part of the entertainment, each one a small grotesque punchline delivered in 16-bit pixel art that somehow lands harder than it has any right to. The fixed save points, activated manually through the menu via a talking black cat, add quiet strategic weight to every room you enter. Saving at the wrong moment before an unsolvable trap is a rite of passage. The lore is sparse and deliberately so. Diary entries scattered through the house sketch the history of the witch Ellen, the manor's true owner, in fragments. The story asks you to pay attention rather than simply absorb cutscenes, and the payoff at the endings rewards that attention with a twist that reviewers across the board described as genuinely shocking. There are multiple endings, and the full picture only assembles once you have seen more than one. The Extra difficulty mode, unlocked after reaching the true ending, remixes item placements, alters enemy behaviors, adds new puzzle solutions, and expands the lore around Ellen considerably. It functions less like a hard mode and more like a second game layered over the first. The honest caveats: a single Normal playthrough runs under two hours, and some players find the item-fetch puzzle loop grows repetitive before the credits roll. The MV remake leans darker on its color palette than the original, which can make a few rooms difficult to parse, particularly in the pitch-black maze section. And anyone averse to gore or imagery involving self-harm should look up the content warnings before committing, because while the pixel art style softens the presentation, the game does not flinch. The jump scares are plentiful too, and opinions divide sharply on whether they feel like punchlines or cheap noise; personally, the sound design earns them, moving from eerie synthesized calm to sudden percussive shock in a way that keeps the nervous system alert across the entire runtime. What this game is, underneath all the death traps, is a piece of intentional craft from a solo creator who understood that horror lives in implication and atmosphere long before it lives in graphical fidelity. The soundtrack does work that a triple-A horror score three times its size often fails to do. The pixel art frames violence in a way that feels more unsettling, not less, because the innocence of the medium is violated deliberately. If you bounced off the original freeware version, the MV remake is the definitive way to encounter it. If you have never heard of The Witch's House at all, you are about to understand why it is credited alongside Ib and Ao Oni for shaping an entire subgenre of RPG Maker horror. Kai, Scout Team

The Witch's House MV

The Witch's House MV

30 oct 2018FummyDANGEN Entertainment
GamerScout opina

Proof that a solo developer with pixel art and a merciless save system can outfear most studio-budget horror games. Plan for two hours of dying, and stay for the twist that changes everything you thought you understood.

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I keep a small mental shelf for games that prove handcraft matters more than budget, and The Witch's House MV has occupied a permanent spot on it since I first watched Let's Plays of the original freeware release years ago. Fummy built the 2012 version alone in RPG Maker VX, and the MV remake represents five times the development hours poured back in: fully redrawn 16-bit tilesets, new character sprites, revised audio cues, and two new difficulty settings that simply did not exist in the free release. The result is one of those rare remakes where the craft upgrade feels earned rather than cosmetic. The structure is pure old-school adventure logic: top-down exploration of a multi-floor manor, environmental puzzles solved by finding items and placing them in the right locations, and absolutely zero combat. There are no hit points that matter in any practical sense. What there is instead is a house that wants to kill Viola in the most inventive ways it can devise. Spike traps. A life-sized toy soldier with a rifle. A giant stuffed bear that pursues you through rooms. Airborne blades preceded by a half-second of audio warning. The game broadcasts its philosophy immediately: you will die often, and the deaths themselves are part of the entertainment, each one a small grotesque punchline delivered in 16-bit pixel art that somehow lands harder than it has any right to. The fixed save points, activated manually through the menu via a talking black cat, add quiet strategic weight to every room you enter. Saving at the wrong moment before an unsolvable trap is a rite of passage. The lore is sparse and deliberately so. Diary entries scattered through the house sketch the history of the witch Ellen, the manor's true owner, in fragments. The story asks you to pay attention rather than simply absorb cutscenes, and the payoff at the endings rewards that attention with a twist that reviewers across the board described as genuinely shocking. There are multiple endings, and the full picture only assembles once you have seen more than one. The Extra difficulty mode, unlocked after reaching the true ending, remixes item placements, alters enemy behaviors, adds new puzzle solutions, and expands the lore around Ellen considerably. It functions less like a hard mode and more like a second game layered over the first. The honest caveats: a single Normal playthrough runs under two hours, and some players find the item-fetch puzzle loop grows repetitive before the credits roll. The MV remake leans darker on its color palette than the original, which can make a few rooms difficult to parse, particularly in the pitch-black maze section. And anyone averse to gore or imagery involving self-harm should look up the content warnings before committing, because while the pixel art style softens the presentation, the game does not flinch. The jump scares are plentiful too, and opinions divide sharply on whether they feel like punchlines or cheap noise; personally, the sound design earns them, moving from eerie synthesized calm to sudden percussive shock in a way that keeps the nervous system alert across the entire runtime. What this game is, underneath all the death traps, is a piece of intentional craft from a solo creator who understood that horror lives in implication and atmosphere long before it lives in graphical fidelity. The soundtrack does work that a triple-A horror score three times its size often fails to do. The pixel art frames violence in a way that feels more unsettling, not less, because the innocence of the medium is violated deliberately. If you bounced off the original freeware version, the MV remake is the definitive way to encounter it. If you have never heard of The Witch's House at all, you are about to understand why it is credited alongside Ib and Ao Oni for shaping an entire subgenre of RPG Maker horror.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayercontroller-supporttier:indieRPG Maker HorrorInstant Death TrapsEnvironmental StorytellingMultiple EndingsTrial-and-Error PuzzlesPixel HorrorJapanese Indie HorrorExtra Mode UnlockShort-Form HorrorAtmospheric Soundscape

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows Vista / 7 / 8
Memory
512 MB RAM
Storage
600 MB available space
Graphics
GPU supporting OpenGL
Processor
Intel® Pentium® 4 2.0 GHz equivalent or faster processor

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Fummy
Distribuidora
DANGEN Entertainment
Fecha de lanzamiento
30 oct 2018

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible The Witch's House MV?

The Witch's House MV está disponible en PC, Mac, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó The Witch's House MV?

The Witch's House MV se lanzó el 30 de octubre de 2018.

¿Quién desarrolló The Witch's House MV?

The Witch's House MV fue desarrollado por Fummy y publicado por DANGEN Entertainment.