Compare Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by MidBoss, LLC.. Published by Chorus Worldwide Games. Released on 5/15/2024. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie. Metacritic score: 76/100.

Gorgeous pixel art, an FM synth soundtrack that haunts you, and a psychic detective story worth experiencing - if you can forgive it ending right as it hits its stride.

I spent the better part of an evening inside the memories of Neo-San Francisco citizens, and by the time the credits rolled I was already mourning the hours I didn't get. That bittersweet ache is probably the most honest thing I can tell you about Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER. It is a short, handcrafted, deeply lovable piece of psy-fi adventure work, and it is also one that feels like it found the exit door too soon. You play as Luna Cruz de la Vega, codename ES88, a natural-born esper employed by MINERVA, a corporate research outfit in a cyberpunk-ified Neo-San Francisco. Luna is paired with the Neurodiver, a bioengineered cephalopod-like creature that amplifies her psychic abilities and lets her dive inside clients' memories to locate and repair corrupted fragments. The core loop is point-and-click: you comb through static environments for interactive objects, gather clues, then drag those clues onto distorted memory fragments to clear the corruption. There is no penalty for wrong attempts, no timer, no fail state. The puzzle difficulty lives almost entirely in whether you spotted the right pixel in the scene - and occasionally that becomes genuinely irritating, the kind of adventure-game pixel-hunt that feels less like mystery-solving and more like guesswork. The larger gameplay issue is that the mechanics simplify as the story accelerates, until pointing-and-clicking starts to feel more like set dressing than substance. What NEURODIVER gets absolutely, non-negotiably right is its presentation. The pixel art is among the most expressive work the genre has produced recently - every background is dense with gags, cameos, and world-building detail. Composer Ken "coda" Snyder built the soundtrack around the OPNA/YM2608 FM chip sounds of PC-8801 and PC-9801 machines, and the result is exactly the kind of synth-wave score that vibrates at a frequency you feel in your sternum. I left the game menu running for an embarrassing stretch of time just to listen to it. Voice acting is a more contested point in the wider community - some reviewers found it warm and characterful, others found the direction inconsistent. I lean toward the former, especially for Luna herself, who is bubbly and nerdy and endearing without tipping into exhausting. The character dynamics are where the writing does its best work. Luna's slow-burn relationship with her bodyguard GATE (a former military android, quietly devoted) carries genuine warmth, and the MINERVA office cast - prankster lab tech Harold, sharp-tongued technician Trace - gives the world a sense of lived-in normalcy that makes the psychic horror elements land harder when they arrive. The overarching plot, a hunt for rogue esper Golden Butterfly who is fragmenting citizens' memories, builds well atmospherically but rushes its resolution. The final stretch is a genuine ride. The problem is the middle needs more room to breathe and the game simply does not allow it. Most players will finish in five to six hours, and if you are coming from 2064: Read Only Memories expecting comparable scope, you should recalibrate. This reads closer to a focused story chapter than a full sequel in terms of runtime and narrative scale. New players have a completely clean entry point thanks to a new protagonist who meets the returning cast fresh. NEURODIVER is a game that wears its influences - 90s anime, FM-era PC aesthetics, Ace Attorney evidence presentation, a little Inception late in the runtime - with genuine pride rather than hollow nostalgia. You can feel the craft behind each scene. The frustration is not with what is here, but with the ceiling of what could have been. If you have any affection for handmade narrative games that smell faintly of old cartridges and feel deeply personal, this one is worth the few hours it asks of you. Just go in knowing it ends before it says everything it wanted to say. Kai, Scout Team

Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER
AdventureCasualIndie

Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER

May 15, 2024MidBoss, LLC.Chorus Worldwide Games
GamerScout Says

Gorgeous pixel art, an FM synth soundtrack that haunts you, and a psychic detective story worth experiencing - if you can forgive it ending right as it hits its stride.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER

I spent the better part of an evening inside the memories of Neo-San Francisco citizens, and by the time the credits rolled I was already mourning the hours I didn't get. That bittersweet ache is probably the most honest thing I can tell you about Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER. It is a short, handcrafted, deeply lovable piece of psy-fi adventure work, and it is also one that feels like it found the exit door too soon. You play as Luna Cruz de la Vega, codename ES88, a natural-born esper employed by MINERVA, a corporate research outfit in a cyberpunk-ified Neo-San Francisco. Luna is paired with the Neurodiver, a bioengineered cephalopod-like creature that amplifies her psychic abilities and lets her dive inside clients' memories to locate and repair corrupted fragments. The core loop is point-and-click: you comb through static environments for interactive objects, gather clues, then drag those clues onto distorted memory fragments to clear the corruption. There is no penalty for wrong attempts, no timer, no fail state. The puzzle difficulty lives almost entirely in whether you spotted the right pixel in the scene - and occasionally that becomes genuinely irritating, the kind of adventure-game pixel-hunt that feels less like mystery-solving and more like guesswork. The larger gameplay issue is that the mechanics simplify as the story accelerates, until pointing-and-clicking starts to feel more like set dressing than substance. What NEURODIVER gets absolutely, non-negotiably right is its presentation. The pixel art is among the most expressive work the genre has produced recently - every background is dense with gags, cameos, and world-building detail. Composer Ken "coda" Snyder built the soundtrack around the OPNA/YM2608 FM chip sounds of PC-8801 and PC-9801 machines, and the result is exactly the kind of synth-wave score that vibrates at a frequency you feel in your sternum. I left the game menu running for an embarrassing stretch of time just to listen to it. Voice acting is a more contested point in the wider community - some reviewers found it warm and characterful, others found the direction inconsistent. I lean toward the former, especially for Luna herself, who is bubbly and nerdy and endearing without tipping into exhausting. The character dynamics are where the writing does its best work. Luna's slow-burn relationship with her bodyguard GATE (a former military android, quietly devoted) carries genuine warmth, and the MINERVA office cast - prankster lab tech Harold, sharp-tongued technician Trace - gives the world a sense of lived-in normalcy that makes the psychic horror elements land harder when they arrive. The overarching plot, a hunt for rogue esper Golden Butterfly who is fragmenting citizens' memories, builds well atmospherically but rushes its resolution. The final stretch is a genuine ride. The problem is the middle needs more room to breathe and the game simply does not allow it. Most players will finish in five to six hours, and if you are coming from 2064: Read Only Memories expecting comparable scope, you should recalibrate. This reads closer to a focused story chapter than a full sequel in terms of runtime and narrative scale. New players have a completely clean entry point thanks to a new protagonist who meets the returning cast fresh. NEURODIVER is a game that wears its influences - 90s anime, FM-era PC aesthetics, Ace Attorney evidence presentation, a little Inception late in the runtime - with genuine pride rather than hollow nostalgia. You can feel the craft behind each scene. The frustration is not with what is here, but with the ceiling of what could have been. If you have any affection for handmade narrative games that smell faintly of old cartridges and feel deeply personal, this one is worth the few hours it asks of you. Just go in knowing it ends before it says everything it wanted to say. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:sub-5Psychic DetectiveFM Synth SoundtrackMemory PuzzleVisual Novel-AdjacentLGBTQ NarrativeCyberpunk IndieShort PlaythroughAce Attorney-Like

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Verified

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 SP1+
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
1000 MB available space
Graphics
Graphics card with DX10 (shader model 4.0) capabilities.
Processor
1.1+ GHz Processor

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
76

Game Info

Developer
MidBoss, LLC.
Publisher
Chorus Worldwide Games
Release Date
May 15, 2024

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What platforms is Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER available on?

Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER released?

Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER was released on 15 May 2024.

Who developed Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER?

Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER was developed by MidBoss, LLC. and published by Chorus Worldwide Games.

Is Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER worth buying?

Read Only Memories: NEURODIVER holds a Metacritic score of 76/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.