Compare Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.. Published by Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.. Released on 2/18/2016. Available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Genres: Adventure. Metacritic score: 82/100.

If you can stomach 30 hours of text and a sadistic cartoon bear running a murder school, this mystery visual novel will grab you by the collar and refuse to let go.

I went in expecting a niche curiosity with a weird premise and came out having completely lost a week to it. Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc is a visual novel murder mystery hybrid that splits each chapter into two distinct halves: a School Life phase where you explore Hope's Peak Academy in first-person, collect Monocoins, give presents to classmates, and slowly watch the tension build, then a Class Trial phase where everything accelerates into something genuinely unlike anything else on PC. The trials are the centrepiece and they earn that status. The core loop has you loading evidence called Truth Bullets and shooting them at contradictions as statements scroll across the screen in a Nonstop Debate, but the game keeps layering on top of that: Hangman's Gambit for working out key words, Bullet Time Battle rhythm segments where you argue your case to a thumping soundtrack, a flashback bullet mechanic that lets you counter one statement with another, and finally a Closing Argument where you sequence the crime into a manga-panel reconstruction. The trial toolkit is arguably overstuffed, and the rhythm sections in particular feel clumsy with mouse and keyboard compared to how they were designed on handheld hardware. The game does offer difficulty settings that strip back or add wrong-answer pressure, which is a smart inclusion for both newcomers and players who want the screws tightened. Outside the courtroom the pacing is slow, sometimes very slow. You spend the bulk of your time reading. The Free Time system lets you bond with classmates in a structure loosely resembling the social links from Persona, unlocking abilities like a steadier trial crosshair or extended time limits, but the interactions are shallower than that comparison suggests. The cast of Ultimate Students, each defined by an absurd single talent like Ultimate Pop Sensation or Ultimate Programmer, is large enough that some characters barely register before the killing game does its work. A handful feel genuinely fleshed out, most are vivid archetypes, and the game leans hard into that contrast for narrative effect. The story is linear with no branching choices worth calling meaningful, so do not go in expecting the decisions to carry weight the way they do in Zero Escape or a proper CRPG. What holds all of it together is writing that is consistently strange, funny, and surprisingly dark, anchored by Monokuma, a two-faced robotic bear who might be the most effective video game villain I have encountered in this genre. The PC port holds up visually in its neon pop-art aesthetic, though the low-resolution roots of a game originally built for the PSP are faintly visible. The Linux version has a known library file issue at launch worth looking up before you install. Replayability is close to zero once you know the solutions, though the bonus School Mode offers a separate resource-management sandbox with its own character interactions if you want to extend your time in Hope's Peak after credits roll. If you like Ace Attorney, Zero Escape, or story-driven Persona titles, this is a direct line to something that scratches the same itch while doing its own thing confidently. Alex, Scout Team

Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc

Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc

Feb 18, 2016Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.
GamerScout Says

If you can stomach 30 hours of text and a sadistic cartoon bear running a murder school, this mystery visual novel will grab you by the collar and refuse to let go.

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Screenshots & Media

About Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc

I went in expecting a niche curiosity with a weird premise and came out having completely lost a week to it. Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc is a visual novel murder mystery hybrid that splits each chapter into two distinct halves: a School Life phase where you explore Hope's Peak Academy in first-person, collect Monocoins, give presents to classmates, and slowly watch the tension build, then a Class Trial phase where everything accelerates into something genuinely unlike anything else on PC. The trials are the centrepiece and they earn that status. The core loop has you loading evidence called Truth Bullets and shooting them at contradictions as statements scroll across the screen in a Nonstop Debate, but the game keeps layering on top of that: Hangman's Gambit for working out key words, Bullet Time Battle rhythm segments where you argue your case to a thumping soundtrack, a flashback bullet mechanic that lets you counter one statement with another, and finally a Closing Argument where you sequence the crime into a manga-panel reconstruction. The trial toolkit is arguably overstuffed, and the rhythm sections in particular feel clumsy with mouse and keyboard compared to how they were designed on handheld hardware. The game does offer difficulty settings that strip back or add wrong-answer pressure, which is a smart inclusion for both newcomers and players who want the screws tightened. Outside the courtroom the pacing is slow, sometimes very slow. You spend the bulk of your time reading. The Free Time system lets you bond with classmates in a structure loosely resembling the social links from Persona, unlocking abilities like a steadier trial crosshair or extended time limits, but the interactions are shallower than that comparison suggests. The cast of Ultimate Students, each defined by an absurd single talent like Ultimate Pop Sensation or Ultimate Programmer, is large enough that some characters barely register before the killing game does its work. A handful feel genuinely fleshed out, most are vivid archetypes, and the game leans hard into that contrast for narrative effect. The story is linear with no branching choices worth calling meaningful, so do not go in expecting the decisions to carry weight the way they do in Zero Escape or a proper CRPG. What holds all of it together is writing that is consistently strange, funny, and surprisingly dark, anchored by Monokuma, a two-faced robotic bear who might be the most effective video game villain I have encountered in this genre. The PC port holds up visually in its neon pop-art aesthetic, though the low-resolution roots of a game originally built for the PSP are faintly visible. The Linux version has a known library file issue at launch worth looking up before you install. Replayability is close to zero once you know the solutions, though the bonus School Mode offers a separate resource-management sandbox with its own character interactions if you want to extend your time in Hope's Peak after credits roll. If you like Ace Attorney, Zero Escape, or story-driven Persona titles, this is a direct line to something that scratches the same itch while doing its own thing confidently.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

Single-playerSteam AchievementsFull controller supportSteam Trading CardsSteam CloudRemote Play on PhoneRemote Play on TabletFamily SharingVisual NovelMurder MysteryClass TrialNonstop DebateDark ComedyPsychological ThrillerAce Attorney-likeLinear NarrativeSchool Setting

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
2.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo or better
Memory
3 GB RAM
Graphics
OpenGL 3.2 or DirectX 9.0c compatible GPU with at least 1GB of VRAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
5 GB available space

Recommended

Processor
Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3470 or better
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
OpenGL 3.2 or DirectX 9.0c compatible GPU with at least 1GB of VRAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
6 GB availab…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
82

Game Info

Developer
Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.
Publisher
Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.
Release Date
Feb 18, 2016

Game Modes

singleplayer

Languages

Audio (2)
EnglishJapanese
Subtitles (3)
EnglishJapaneseTraditional Chinese

Features

AchievementsController SupportCloud Saves

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Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc is available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox.

When was Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc released?

Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc was released on 18 February 2016.

Who developed Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc?

Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc was developed by Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd..

Is Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc worth buying?

Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc holds a Metacritic score of 82/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.