Compare Flower in Us prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Chalkseagull. Published by PsychoFlux Entertainment. Released on 7/25/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Indie, Simulation.

Two characters, one locked basement, a fiction-soaked authoritarian Korea, and about two hours to figure out who you actually are. Worth every minute if you can stomach an ending that asks more than it answers.

I'll be straight with you: I normally track decision trees the way other people track football stats, so a two-hour chamber drama built in RPG Maker doesn't usually land on my list. Flower in Us landed anyway, and it's because the decision architecture inside that tiny basement is sharper than its runtime suggests. You wake up as Inspector Moss in a fictional 1980s Korea under authoritarian rule, memory wiped, and the only other person in the room is Peony, a young woman tied to a pillar who claims to be a student resistance recruit - and who insists you were the one who arrested her. That setup is the whole map. The locked basement is your only environment, but it's dense: combination locks, coded symbols that feed into layered clue chains, inventory items that require physical interaction (there's a keyboard-manipulation mechanic to cut Peony's bonds that's a small but memorable design touch). The puzzles range from logical inventory use to multi-step cipher work where the answer to one lock is buried two or three clues deep. Nothing is obtuse, but don't expect the passcode to be written next to the lock. The conversation system is where the real branching happens. Talking to Peony isn't flavour - it's the primary investigation tool. Showing her items you find unlocks new dialogue paths, and those paths feed directly into the three main endings and the broader web of branching storylines. The writing earns its thriller label: the political backdrop of authoritarian rule gives the trust-or-don't tension actual moral weight rather than simple puzzle-gate gating. Community players have compared the tonal cocktail to Detention and OMORI, which is accurate enough to be useful. The artwork is hand-drawn across more than 200 pieces, and the original soundtrack (six composed tracks, available separately) does a lot of atmospheric heavy lifting in a very compressed space. The criticisms are real and worth knowing. The ending splits player opinion hard - some find it resonant and open, others find it underbaked given how carefully the build-up is paced. The slow-burn structure means the payoff feel is entirely dependent on your tolerance for ambiguity. The game also uses generative AI for certain background objects and sound effects, which is disclosed but has irritated a portion of the player base. Steam Deck users have reported crashes and instability, so PC is the safe platform here. There is no mod support and no workshop ecosystem - this is a linear-ish authored experience, not a sandbox. For the audience reading this page: if you want 200-hour strategy depth, look elsewhere. But if you have a free evening and respect tight authored games that use their constraints well - one room, two characters, three endings, real political texture - Flower in Us delivers more per hour than most indie adventures twice its size. The RPG Maker Award for Best Adventure it picked up in 2026 is not a marketing accident; the community vote reflects genuine affection. Just go in knowing the final act may leave you with questions rather than closure, and decide in advance whether that's a feature or a bug for you. Diego, Scout Team

Flower in Us
AdventureIndieSimulation

Flower in Us

Jul 25, 2025ChalkseagullPsychoFlux Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Two characters, one locked basement, a fiction-soaked authoritarian Korea, and about two hours to figure out who you actually are. Worth every minute if you can stomach an ending that asks more than it answers.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Flower in Us

I'll be straight with you: I normally track decision trees the way other people track football stats, so a two-hour chamber drama built in RPG Maker doesn't usually land on my list. Flower in Us landed anyway, and it's because the decision architecture inside that tiny basement is sharper than its runtime suggests. You wake up as Inspector Moss in a fictional 1980s Korea under authoritarian rule, memory wiped, and the only other person in the room is Peony, a young woman tied to a pillar who claims to be a student resistance recruit - and who insists you were the one who arrested her. That setup is the whole map. The locked basement is your only environment, but it's dense: combination locks, coded symbols that feed into layered clue chains, inventory items that require physical interaction (there's a keyboard-manipulation mechanic to cut Peony's bonds that's a small but memorable design touch). The puzzles range from logical inventory use to multi-step cipher work where the answer to one lock is buried two or three clues deep. Nothing is obtuse, but don't expect the passcode to be written next to the lock. The conversation system is where the real branching happens. Talking to Peony isn't flavour - it's the primary investigation tool. Showing her items you find unlocks new dialogue paths, and those paths feed directly into the three main endings and the broader web of branching storylines. The writing earns its thriller label: the political backdrop of authoritarian rule gives the trust-or-don't tension actual moral weight rather than simple puzzle-gate gating. Community players have compared the tonal cocktail to Detention and OMORI, which is accurate enough to be useful. The artwork is hand-drawn across more than 200 pieces, and the original soundtrack (six composed tracks, available separately) does a lot of atmospheric heavy lifting in a very compressed space. The criticisms are real and worth knowing. The ending splits player opinion hard - some find it resonant and open, others find it underbaked given how carefully the build-up is paced. The slow-burn structure means the payoff feel is entirely dependent on your tolerance for ambiguity. The game also uses generative AI for certain background objects and sound effects, which is disclosed but has irritated a portion of the player base. Steam Deck users have reported crashes and instability, so PC is the safe platform here. There is no mod support and no workshop ecosystem - this is a linear-ish authored experience, not a sandbox. For the audience reading this page: if you want 200-hour strategy depth, look elsewhere. But if you have a free evening and respect tight authored games that use their constraints well - one room, two characters, three endings, real political texture - Flower in Us delivers more per hour than most indie adventures twice its size. The RPG Maker Award for Best Adventure it picked up in 2026 is not a marketing accident; the community vote reflects genuine affection. Just go in knowing the final act may leave you with questions rather than closure, and decide in advance whether that's a feature or a bug for you. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Chamber DramaMultiple EndingsInvestigation PuzzlesBranching DialoguePolitical ThrillerHand-Drawn ArtRPGMakerShort CompletableAtmospheric Soundtrack

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 / 11
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
800 MB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce MX150 or equivalent
Processor
Intel Core i5-8250U or equivalent

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Chalkseagull
Publisher
PsychoFlux Entertainment
Release Date
Jul 25, 2025

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What platforms is Flower in Us available on?

Flower in Us is available on PC.

When was Flower in Us released?

Flower in Us was released on 25 July 2025.

Who developed Flower in Us?

Flower in Us was developed by Chalkseagull and published by PsychoFlux Entertainment.