![]() ![]() ![]() Though the game tries to draw on classic Japanese horror themes, it executes the creepy atmosphere much better than the personalities. During cutscenes the characters talk haltingly and in whispers to each other, and they do seemingly stupid things that land them in danger. While they all play a little differently, you could be forgiven for forgetting them, as each character has such a wooden personality and forgettable dialogue it’s hard to recall any outstanding moments in the story. You’ll alternate playing as Yuri Kozukata, a young spirit medium, Ren Hojo, an author researching the occult, and Miu Hinasaki, a girl searching for her mother. The three playable characters in the game take turns as protagonist in different chapters of the narrative, each with their own specialties when it comes to fighting the spirits of the departed. The story of Maiden of Black Water follows a group of people drawn to Hikami Mountain, a place where people go to commit suicide, similar to the real-life Aokigahara Forest. The Fatal Frame games feature an assortment of protagonists picking up the Camera Obscura, an antique camera with the unique capability of photographing and subsequently exorcising malicious ghosts. However, while it has great atmosphere throughout, actually busting ghosts is where Fatal Frame: Maiden of Black Water, like a panicked victim in a horror movie, stumbles. The esteemed horror games that have players fighting ghosts by taking their picture seem tailor-made for the system’s Game Pad, which allows players to hold the controller like a camera as their character does in the game. Fatal Frame is a series that seems like it’s been waiting over a decade for the Wii U console to come along. ![]()
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