Compare Bionic Heart prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Winter Wolves. Published by Winter Wolves. Released on 8/13/2014. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Indie.

Twenty-four endings, a perpetually rain-soaked London, and one android who might kill you or kiss you depending on your next dialogue pick - Winter Wolves' cyberpunk VN earns its replay loops.

I've sat through a lot of visual novels built around a single gimmick - one route, one ending, a linear march toward someone's preferred conclusion. Bionic Heart does the opposite. It hands you a morally complicated android named Tanya, drops you into a 2099 London where climate collapse means the sky never clears, and then quietly lets your choices determine whether the whole thing ends in romance, tragedy, corporate conspiracy, or something darker. That branching structure is the real draw here, and it holds up better than the game's age might suggest. The core loop mixes classic visual novel reading with light adventure-game interactivity. You pick dialogue options, but you also navigate a holomap to choose which locations to visit - places you have already been and things you have already said carry forward and open or close dialogue paths later. It gives the choice architecture a memory that many VNs skip. Tanya herself is the narrative engine: she is an experimental android who has escaped from Nanotech, the megacorp Luke works for, carrying memories from the early 21st century she cannot explain. The story asks reasonable questions about consciousness and loyalty without overextending itself into philosophy, which I appreciate - it knows what kind of story it is telling and does not try to become Neuromancer halfway through. The supporting cast - Luke's best friend Tom, his fiancee Helen, the company's fixer Julia - all feed into a relationship system that tracks your standing with each character, and those numbers quietly shape which of the 24 endings you reach. The production is showing its years honestly. The voice acting is fully present, which is a real commitment for a small independent developer, but the recording quality is uneven in places - some performances land, others feel like a first take that was kept for practical reasons. The royalty-free soundtrack does its job atmospherically without leaving a strong impression on its own. The manga-style art has a clean, functional quality rather than anything visually arresting, and a handful of typos survive in the text. None of these are dealbreakers for the genre's audience, but newcomers expecting the production values of larger VN studios will notice the gap. What Bionic Heart does genuinely well is the shape of its replay. Roughly four hours of voiced dialogue across the full playthrough, but the branching is real - choices gate entire scenes, not just cosmetic variants, and the darker endings (Tanya turning possessive, Luke getting himself killed through bad judgment) are structurally distinct from the optimistic routes. The game received a 90/100 from Gamertell on original release, and that enthusiasm is still legible today if you go in calibrated. This is a low-budget cyberpunk VN with more structural craft than its price tier implies, made by a one-developer studio that understood pacing and consequence better than many bigger projects around it. If you have already worked through the Winter Wolves library or want an entry point to the developer, this is where the story starts - the sequel picks up directly from one of the endings here. Adjust your expectations for the production era, lean into the branching, and give it the two or three runs it is designed for. Kai, Scout Team

Bionic Heart
AdventureIndie

Bionic Heart

Aug 13, 2014Winter Wolves
GamerScout Says

Twenty-four endings, a perpetually rain-soaked London, and one android who might kill you or kiss you depending on your next dialogue pick - Winter Wolves' cyberpunk VN earns its replay loops.

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About Bionic Heart

I've sat through a lot of visual novels built around a single gimmick - one route, one ending, a linear march toward someone's preferred conclusion. Bionic Heart does the opposite. It hands you a morally complicated android named Tanya, drops you into a 2099 London where climate collapse means the sky never clears, and then quietly lets your choices determine whether the whole thing ends in romance, tragedy, corporate conspiracy, or something darker. That branching structure is the real draw here, and it holds up better than the game's age might suggest. The core loop mixes classic visual novel reading with light adventure-game interactivity. You pick dialogue options, but you also navigate a holomap to choose which locations to visit - places you have already been and things you have already said carry forward and open or close dialogue paths later. It gives the choice architecture a memory that many VNs skip. Tanya herself is the narrative engine: she is an experimental android who has escaped from Nanotech, the megacorp Luke works for, carrying memories from the early 21st century she cannot explain. The story asks reasonable questions about consciousness and loyalty without overextending itself into philosophy, which I appreciate - it knows what kind of story it is telling and does not try to become Neuromancer halfway through. The supporting cast - Luke's best friend Tom, his fiancee Helen, the company's fixer Julia - all feed into a relationship system that tracks your standing with each character, and those numbers quietly shape which of the 24 endings you reach. The production is showing its years honestly. The voice acting is fully present, which is a real commitment for a small independent developer, but the recording quality is uneven in places - some performances land, others feel like a first take that was kept for practical reasons. The royalty-free soundtrack does its job atmospherically without leaving a strong impression on its own. The manga-style art has a clean, functional quality rather than anything visually arresting, and a handful of typos survive in the text. None of these are dealbreakers for the genre's audience, but newcomers expecting the production values of larger VN studios will notice the gap. What Bionic Heart does genuinely well is the shape of its replay. Roughly four hours of voiced dialogue across the full playthrough, but the branching is real - choices gate entire scenes, not just cosmetic variants, and the darker endings (Tanya turning possessive, Luke getting himself killed through bad judgment) are structurally distinct from the optimistic routes. The game received a 90/100 from Gamertell on original release, and that enthusiasm is still legible today if you go in calibrated. This is a low-budget cyberpunk VN with more structural craft than its price tier implies, made by a one-developer studio that understood pacing and consequence better than many bigger projects around it. If you have already worked through the Winter Wolves library or want an entry point to the developer, this is where the story starts - the sequel picks up directly from one of the endings here. Adjust your expectations for the production era, lean into the branching, and give it the two or three runs it is designed for. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5CyberpunkFull Voice ActingHolomap NavigationRelationship System24 EndingsDark EndingsBranching NarrativeShort Replayable

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP
Storage
185 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX or OpenGL compatible card
Processor
1Ghz

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Game Info

Developer
Winter Wolves
Publisher
Winter Wolves
Release Date
Aug 13, 2014

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What platforms is Bionic Heart available on?

Bionic Heart is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Bionic Heart released?

Bionic Heart was released on 13 August 2014.

Who developed Bionic Heart?

Bionic Heart was developed by Winter Wolves.