
Black Sheep
A Chinese indie side-scroller that wraps school-yard horror in a five-chapter mystery worth finishing - if you can read Simplified Chinese, because there is no English localization.
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Screenshots & Media

About Black Sheep
I spent time with a lot of small, under-the-radar releases from Chinese solo and small-team developers, and Black Sheep is exactly the kind of handcrafted oddity that gets lost in the noise of a Steam release cycle. Set in a late-1990s junior high near the fictional town of Lingyi, the whole game is soaked in a specific, unsettling atmosphere - flooded corridors, decaying classrooms, the weight of a tragedy that happened just off-screen. That setting alone is doing heavy lifting, and when the art direction commits to it, the mood is genuinely memorable. The structure is five chapters, each one looping back to a different slice of the same year's events. You are positioned as a bystander rather than a direct participant, which is a design choice that creates real emotional distance - sometimes in a good, literary way, and sometimes in a frustrating one. Progression works through gathering testimony, shifting between character perspectives, and gradually identifying who the real danger is among a cast of students and staff. The puzzle difficulty sits at a moderate pitch; players report rarely hitting hard walls, which means the experience flows more like a slow horror novel than a challenge-first adventure game. Chase sequences with monster encounters add occasional pressure, and the tension those moments generate is reportedly one of the more successful parts of the package. Where the game loses steam is in the writing. Community sentiment - mostly from Chinese-language players, who make up almost all of the audience since there is currently no English localization - points to a narrative that starts with strong atmosphere but drifts into melodrama in its later chapters. The character drama can feel overwrought in a way that undercuts the horror. The autosave system has also drawn complaints: save points are spaced unevenly, and a poorly timed checkpoint can push you into replaying longer stretches than you would want. Gamepad support is reportedly inconsistent, which matters for a side-scroller. The localization situation is the biggest practical warning I can give any Western buyer right now. There is no English language support. This is a Simplified Chinese-only release, and the story is the product. If you cannot read the language, the entire game collapses. That is not a minor caveat. It should be the first line you read before clicking add to cart. For players who can engage with it in Chinese, the handcrafted pixel environments and the atmospheric sound design are worth the commitment, even if the script does not always earn the mood it creates. Black Sheep knows what it wants to be - a slow, school-set psychological horror mystery built around perspective-swapping and social deduction - and it mostly gets there. The mixed Steam reception reflects a real split: the atmosphere is doing a lot of work that the story occasionally fails to support. But for a single developer's first or early release, the craft in the visual and audio layers is attentive enough to recommend to patient players who can actually read it. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows10(64Bit)
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 4 GB available space
- Graphics
- Nvidia 7900 / equivalent
- Processor
- i5 or above
Recommended
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 4 GB available space
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Game Info
- Developer
- 完蛋了的国王
- Publisher
- Gamirror Games
- Release Date
- Dec 15, 2022