Compare Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Cylight Studios. Published by Cylight Studios. Released on 9/28/2015. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Simulation.

Sci-fi VN fans starved of space-set stories will find a genuinely ambitious premise here, but a short runtime, uneven writing, and no Steam achievements make this a wait-for-a-sale proposition.

My spreadsheet brain kept wanting to map out this game's decision tree, and honestly that instinct is about the most analytical fun you can squeeze from Orion. You play as Sam Acacius, a teenager living aboard a massive space station called the Orion Torus who receives an anonymous warning that his home will be destroyed in days. The setup touches on time travel, artificial intelligence, and virtual reality across its various story branches, and that combination of hard sci-fi themes in a visual novel wrapper is rarer than it should be. Credit to Cylight Studios for choosing a setting that most indie VN developers skip entirely. The structure gives you four main paths leading to nine endings, with a locked true ending that only unlocks after you have cleared the other eight. On paper that is solid replay architecture. In practice, the community has flagged that finding each branch without a walkthrough is genuinely frustrating, and there are no Steam achievements to guide or reward the completionist run. The save system reportedly caused problems at launch, which is a significant usability failure for a genre where players expect to bookmark and backtrack freely. Whether those issues have been patched in the years since release is unclear from current player reports. The production side is a mixed bag. The UI is clean and purpose-built rather than a default engine skin, the original soundtrack holds up, and the full English voice cast covers every character, which is an effort most small-studio VNs skip. The background art is clean and distinctive. Sprite work lands closer to average, and the writing itself carries noticeable rough edges: tense inconsistencies in narration, the occasional typo, and some awkward phrasing that a copy editor pass would have caught. That matters more in a text-driven format than it would in an action game. The protagonist Sam also drew complaints from some players who found his personality hard to root for, which is a real liability when you are spending the entire runtime inside his head. The runtime is the most common sticking point across player feedback: short even by English VN standards, with an average Steam playtime sitting well under an hour per session. The world of Orion, built around a Unionist society with clear systemic tensions, feels like it has enough scaffolding for a much longer story. What is here feels like a pilot episode that ended before the interesting politics kicked in. If you are a VN reader who wants to see what a Western indie studio does with classic sci-fi thought experiments, there is something worth experiencing. If you need mechanical depth, branching consequence systems with real weight, or a protagonist you want to spend time with, this one is going to leave you wanting. Diego, Scout Team

Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel
AdventureCasualSimulation

Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel

Sep 28, 2015Cylight Studios
GamerScout Says

Sci-fi VN fans starved of space-set stories will find a genuinely ambitious premise here, but a short runtime, uneven writing, and no Steam achievements make this a wait-for-a-sale proposition.

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About Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel

My spreadsheet brain kept wanting to map out this game's decision tree, and honestly that instinct is about the most analytical fun you can squeeze from Orion. You play as Sam Acacius, a teenager living aboard a massive space station called the Orion Torus who receives an anonymous warning that his home will be destroyed in days. The setup touches on time travel, artificial intelligence, and virtual reality across its various story branches, and that combination of hard sci-fi themes in a visual novel wrapper is rarer than it should be. Credit to Cylight Studios for choosing a setting that most indie VN developers skip entirely. The structure gives you four main paths leading to nine endings, with a locked true ending that only unlocks after you have cleared the other eight. On paper that is solid replay architecture. In practice, the community has flagged that finding each branch without a walkthrough is genuinely frustrating, and there are no Steam achievements to guide or reward the completionist run. The save system reportedly caused problems at launch, which is a significant usability failure for a genre where players expect to bookmark and backtrack freely. Whether those issues have been patched in the years since release is unclear from current player reports. The production side is a mixed bag. The UI is clean and purpose-built rather than a default engine skin, the original soundtrack holds up, and the full English voice cast covers every character, which is an effort most small-studio VNs skip. The background art is clean and distinctive. Sprite work lands closer to average, and the writing itself carries noticeable rough edges: tense inconsistencies in narration, the occasional typo, and some awkward phrasing that a copy editor pass would have caught. That matters more in a text-driven format than it would in an action game. The protagonist Sam also drew complaints from some players who found his personality hard to root for, which is a real liability when you are spending the entire runtime inside his head. The runtime is the most common sticking point across player feedback: short even by English VN standards, with an average Steam playtime sitting well under an hour per session. The world of Orion, built around a Unionist society with clear systemic tensions, feels like it has enough scaffolding for a much longer story. What is here feels like a pilot episode that ended before the interesting politics kicked in. If you are a VN reader who wants to see what a Western indie studio does with classic sci-fi thought experiments, there is something worth experiencing. If you need mechanical depth, branching consequence systems with real weight, or a protagonist you want to spend time with, this one is going to leave you wanting. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Multiple EndingsTrue Ending LockFull Voice ActingTime TravelSpace Station SettingShort RuntimeWestern VNBranching Narrative

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7

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Game Info

Developer
Cylight Studios
Publisher
Cylight Studios
Release Date
Sep 28, 2015

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Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel released?

Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel was released on 28 September 2015.

Who developed Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel?

Orion: A Sci-Fi Visual Novel was developed by Cylight Studios.