Why Umineko Is the Best Game for Halloween During a Pandemic
It’s that time of the year when we all have to ask the most important question: do you believe in what goes beyond explanation? Halloween gives everyone a time to break out of our monotonous day to day selves and put on a scary costume. It’s a time where everyone celebrates their fears together with scary movie gatherings and new costumed performances of our trauma-induced dreamselves. And although this year we are stuck in a pandemic, that doesn’t mean we have to lose any of the celebration!
While I could raise a costumed glass or watch scary movies on Zoom, they just don’t hit the same behind a glowing screen. My glass of cheap red wine sat in a sad plastic cup alone, attempting to regain some of the warmth that came before all of this. Instead, I have found that more long term horror has created not only the feeling of the magical month, but also a sense of security knowing all our friends are here for each other. I have found this in reading Umineko: When the Seagulls Cry as a group performance with my friends.
Umineko is the perfect game for the quarantined Halloween firstly because of its format. I have a lot of friends who don’t have the brain juice to figure out a complex game or watch a film. However, reading a visual novel together and doing voices is just the right balance of goofing off that allows for conversation as well. Friends are assigned to certain characters and voice their lines when they come up, and usually it leads to fun jokes we all create with each other.
But it isn’t just the form that makes Umineko perfect for Halloween. Umineko is a game that takes place during Halloween. The game follows characters that question what we choose to believe when stressful ambiguity enters our lives. What brought the door to slam on my foot? Was it bad luck? Magic? Perhaps a prank by a rat in the wall? This is the sort of predicament that Umineko questions within a larger story about how several aristocratic figures were killed within the span of less than a week.
The story of Umineko follows the family of a wealthy Japanese dynasty during the 1980’s coming together again on an isolated island for their yearly family conference. However, this year all of the adults think that the family head is going to pass away soon and leave his inheritance of ¥20 billion worth of gold buried on the island. And for a family of wealthy money hoarders, they aren’t going to be satisfied at just getting an even share.
So for the first 12 hours of the game, which make up the first episode, it’s pretty much your visual novel version of Knives Out. The kids all crack jokes behind their parents’ backs as they scheme about how to steal away more money. Parents reveal that they have unhealthy relationships with their children. The house servants are entirely fed up with the family’s games they are thrown into, rightfully so. Then……things get a bit meta.
I should probably mention at this point that Umineko is overwhelmingly long. I don’t mean Final Fantasy long, I mean Homestuck long. So by saying the first 12 hours of the game focus on the family drama, that’s pretty much just a drop in the ocean of what is to come. This is especially true, as a witch named Beatrice reveals herself at the end of episode one and the main protagonist challenges her to replay the series of events which transpired on the island to make his past self believe in witches.
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