Kamaitachi no Yoru (Japanese: かまいたちの夜, "The Night of the Sickle Weasel"), released in English as Banshee's Last Cry,[1] is a visual novel created by Chunsoft. It was first released for Super Famicom (the Japanese version of the Super NES) and was later ported to other consoles. An English localized version of the game was translated by Jeremy Blaustein and was released for Android and iOS by Aksys Games in 2014.[1][2][3] The game is the second sound novel by Chunsoft and brought a myriad of other companies to develop similar games. The term "sound novel" was a registered trademark, but is regarded as a genre. The game was a financial success. It sold 750,000 units for Super Famicom[4] and over 400,000 units for PlayStation.[5] The game sold 1.25 million units with remakes and ports in April 2002.[6]
![]() | This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Japanese. (February 2015) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
![]() | This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2015) |
Kamaitachi no Yoru | |
---|---|
![]() Super Famicom cover art | |
Developer(s) | Chunsoft |
Publisher(s) |
|
Director(s) | Kazuya Asano |
Producer(s) | Koichi Nakamura |
Writer(s) | Takemaru Abiko |
Composer(s) | Kota Kano Kojiro Nakashima |
Platform(s) | Super Famicom, PlayStation, Game Boy Advance, PC, mobile, iOS, PlayStation Vita, Microsoft Windows |
Release | November 25, 1994
|
Genre(s) | Visual novel, adventure, crime, horror, mystery |
Mode(s) | Single player |
The player reads the text on a gamebook.
After finding a note and losing phone calls, a group of guests solve the case about the murder. Additional deaths occur for a bad ending if the player lacks all clues.
The game was revealed in the guidebook. The contest called for readers to write the storyline with the event. It was allotted for submissions and many readers cannot finish it. Ten were published in a book titled Anata dake no Kamaitachi no Yoru (あなただけのかまいたちの夜, lit. "Your Own Night of the Sickle Weasels") for the short story and gamebook. The book was a success, despite the fact that it targeted readers. The writers received the money for publishing a book. A similar competition started upon the release of Kamaitachi no Yoru 2. It went out of print after many years, but was re-published after making the sequel.
Kōjirō Nakashima and Kōta Katō composed the game. It gained significant popularity and was reused in television shows about Aum Shinrikyo. The background for the crime was used in the show. Two songs, "Sequence" and "Two People Return Alive" were orchestrated for the fourth volume of Orchestral Game Music Concerts.
Background images included the lodge in Hakuba, Nagano. Exceptions are the background for bathrooms and the wine cellar with miniatures. All characters have silhouettes. The English localization changed the setting including the graphic at British Columbia.
The game was ported to PlayStation on December 3, 1998 and for Game Boy Advance on June 28, 2002. It was released on SoftBank Mobile on April 1, 2002, and on PC on July 1, 2002. i-mode released it on January 30, 2004. The story had minor changes for the script of Kamaitachi no Yoru × 3 for PlayStation 2. Aksys Games released the game in English for iOS entitled Banshee's Last Cry in January 2014.[7]
A radio drama was released on Compact Disc. The characters appeared in a different story-line with biochemical weapons. It stars Hikaru Midorikawa and Yumi Tōma.
The two-hour drama series was aired by Tokyo Broadcasting System on July 3, 2002. Kamaitachi no Yoru 2 was released on July 18 of the same year, and the first edition of the game contained a bonus DVD of the entire drama. Like the radio drama version, the television is not a rendition of the actual game (the premise is that the fans gathered to shoot a film based on the game, when one of the characters are killed). It recreated the tense and mysterious atmosphere.
Famitsu scored the Game Boy Advance game 31 out of 40,[8] and for Super Famicom for 30 out of 40.[9]