Compare Yousei prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by sakevisual. Published by sakevisual. Released on 9/14/2018. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Indie.

Third chapter in sakevisual's psychic detective trilogy, and by far its most character-rich entry. Play Jisei and Kansei first, or you will be lost and it will be your own fault.

I've followed sakevisual's quiet little supernatural mystery series since its earliest episodes, and Yousei is the one where all that patient groundwork finally pays off. This is the third investigation for Kangai, a teenager who can relive a corpse's final moments through touch, and arriving at it cold would be a genuine mistake. The first two entries, Jisei and Kansei, are short; playing both before this one takes only a few hours and they exist precisely so that this chapter can land with weight. If you skip them, you are robbing yourself. The setup is tighter than anything the series attempted before. Kangai and his crew of government-affiliated psychic detectives go undercover at a university, nominally to dig into his own murky past, and within hours a professor is dead, crushed by a bell. The mystery itself is competent and satisfying, but the real engine here is the character work. Aki, Naoki, Li Mei, and the returning antagonist Chance are written with genuine nuance: Naoki's perfect memory doubles as a quiet burden, Aki's moral-grey history keeps surfacing at inopportune moments, and Chance, who is absolutely not the harmless eccentric she performs as, generates more tension per scene than most visual novels manage in an entire playthrough. Kangai himself remains text-only, no voice actor, and that choice reads as deliberate craft rather than budget constraint. It pulls you into his interiority in a way that voiced protagonists often undermine. The interaction model is a hybrid point-and-click and dialogue-tree system built on Ren'Py. You move between campus locations, select suspects to interrogate, and make choices that gate you toward one of four endings. The exploration system was reworked for the updated Steam and itch release with revised backgrounds and a cleaner navigation menu, and the improvement is noticeable. Backgrounds were the weakest visual element in the earlier versions; they are more cohesive here. Character art by M. Beatriz Garcia has always been the visual highlight of the series, and in Yousei the sprite work and CG illustrations are the best the trilogy has produced. Marc Conrad Tabula's score sits under every scene with a low, patient atmosphere, never reaching for drama it has not earned, and the voice cast, which includes Micah Solusod, Cherami Leigh, Kira Buckland, and Erica Mendez among others, delivers performances that consistently elevate the written material. At eight to nine hours with full voice acting enabled, Yousei knows when to end. There is no padding. The pacing in the first act is deliberately slow while the undercover setup is established, but anyone who has read a good mystery novel will recognize the rhythm and trust it. Players who want constant momentum or action beats will push back against that opening stretch. Players who want to sit inside an atmosphere and actually get to know a cast of characters before the case explodes will find the slow burn completely justified. A word of genuine caution: the fourth ending, the true route, closes on a cliffhanger that assumes a follow-up exists. As of writing, the fourth installment has not yet released on Steam, so you will finish this wanting more and having nowhere to go immediately. That is either exciting or maddening depending on your tolerance for serialized storytelling. Kai, Scout Team

Yousei
AdventureIndie

Yousei

Sep 14, 2018sakevisual
GamerScout Says

Third chapter in sakevisual's psychic detective trilogy, and by far its most character-rich entry. Play Jisei and Kansei first, or you will be lost and it will be your own fault.

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About Yousei

I've followed sakevisual's quiet little supernatural mystery series since its earliest episodes, and Yousei is the one where all that patient groundwork finally pays off. This is the third investigation for Kangai, a teenager who can relive a corpse's final moments through touch, and arriving at it cold would be a genuine mistake. The first two entries, Jisei and Kansei, are short; playing both before this one takes only a few hours and they exist precisely so that this chapter can land with weight. If you skip them, you are robbing yourself. The setup is tighter than anything the series attempted before. Kangai and his crew of government-affiliated psychic detectives go undercover at a university, nominally to dig into his own murky past, and within hours a professor is dead, crushed by a bell. The mystery itself is competent and satisfying, but the real engine here is the character work. Aki, Naoki, Li Mei, and the returning antagonist Chance are written with genuine nuance: Naoki's perfect memory doubles as a quiet burden, Aki's moral-grey history keeps surfacing at inopportune moments, and Chance, who is absolutely not the harmless eccentric she performs as, generates more tension per scene than most visual novels manage in an entire playthrough. Kangai himself remains text-only, no voice actor, and that choice reads as deliberate craft rather than budget constraint. It pulls you into his interiority in a way that voiced protagonists often undermine. The interaction model is a hybrid point-and-click and dialogue-tree system built on Ren'Py. You move between campus locations, select suspects to interrogate, and make choices that gate you toward one of four endings. The exploration system was reworked for the updated Steam and itch release with revised backgrounds and a cleaner navigation menu, and the improvement is noticeable. Backgrounds were the weakest visual element in the earlier versions; they are more cohesive here. Character art by M. Beatriz Garcia has always been the visual highlight of the series, and in Yousei the sprite work and CG illustrations are the best the trilogy has produced. Marc Conrad Tabula's score sits under every scene with a low, patient atmosphere, never reaching for drama it has not earned, and the voice cast, which includes Micah Solusod, Cherami Leigh, Kira Buckland, and Erica Mendez among others, delivers performances that consistently elevate the written material. At eight to nine hours with full voice acting enabled, Yousei knows when to end. There is no padding. The pacing in the first act is deliberately slow while the undercover setup is established, but anyone who has read a good mystery novel will recognize the rhythm and trust it. Players who want constant momentum or action beats will push back against that opening stretch. Players who want to sit inside an atmosphere and actually get to know a cast of characters before the case explodes will find the slow burn completely justified. A word of genuine caution: the fourth ending, the true route, closes on a cliffhanger that assumes a follow-up exists. As of writing, the fourth installment has not yet released on Steam, so you will finish this wanting more and having nowhere to go immediately. That is either exciting or maddening depending on your tolerance for serialized storytelling. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:indieVisual NovelSupernatural MysteryPsychic DetectivePoint-and-Click InvestigationMultiple EndingsStory-RichAnime-StyleRen'Py

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
XP
Memory
512 MB RAM
Storage
332 MB available space
Processor
1 GHz

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
sakevisual
Publisher
sakevisual
Release Date
Sep 14, 2018

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