Included In: Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality
Genre: Visual Novel
Pitch: Walk through town finding and petting funny animals. A short, bilingual picture book.
My expectations: Looks super cute. I don't see a single written word in any of the screenshots, and its style is completely unlike any other visual novel I've reviewed so far. I'm feeling good about this.
Review:
If you have a very young child and an iPad, download Arigatou, Ningen-san! right away. It’s going to be a huge hit in your house.
For those of us who aren’t churning through a stack of picture books every night, the appeal will be limited.
A bird named Tori-san (“tori” is Japanese for bird) lands on your house and explains that animals around town need love and attention, setting off a linear journey to find five animals across three screens.
A snake named Hebi-san (go ahead and guess the Japanese word for snake) is hiding behind a not-at-all-subtly rustling plant. The other four animals aren’t hiding at all, which feels like a missed opportunity.
Once an animal is found, it must be squashed and stretched, with animations that are guaranteed to send any toddler into paroxysms of giggles.
And that’s all there is to it.
The two-finger controls are built for a touchscreen. On a PC, this is emulated by holding Ctrl while clicking. It works, but it’s inelegant.
The writing is cute enough, but it’s not the star of the show. The music and sound effects are fitting, but again, they’re not spectacular. It’s all about funny, squishy animals.
+ Cuuuute.
+ Funny!
+ Perfect for tiny kids who are just starting to take an interest that flat, glowing thing you always have in your hand.
+ Maybe 5-10 minutes from start to finish.
– The animal-squishing scenes take a little too long for my liking. You squish and squish and squish, and at some point—I could never quite figure out the trigger—the animal says, "Cool, that's enough," and the scene ends.
– Little variety. How about some more hide and seek? What if all the animals didn't have the exact same request?
– Unintuitive mouse and keyboard controls. The game refers to two-finger touchscreen operations as "zoom and pinch"—wouldn't it make more sense to map these actions to the mouse wheel or the right mouse button? Take it easy on the toddlers.
– All text is displayed in both English and Japanese at all times. I love that it's bilingual; I'm confused by the execution. As an English speaker who is trying to learn Japanese, it's too complex for me. Most text boxes contain multiple sentences, so I have a hard time comparing the two languages. A furigana option would be helpful, as early readers like myself will likely find the some of the kanji impenetrable. Since there's no recorded speech, I must assume everything's meant to be read by mommy or daddy. If said parent is already fluent in two languages—these specific languages—they're probably capable of translating the writing on their own, leaving me to wonder why all text is displayed in both English and Japanese at all times.
🧡🧡🧡🤍🤍
Bottom Line: Arigatou, Ningen-san is free, it's cute, and the picture book crowd will flip for its funny animal squishing.
By the way, have to looked up "ningen" yet? That one will catch you off guard.
#JakeReviewsItch is a series of daily game reviews. You can learn more here. You can also browse past reviews...
"Hello! I'm very new to Hope's Peak Academy, and I really want to meet everyone. If you could like or reblog this post if you are a Dangan Ronpa OC or wouldn't mind roleplaying with one that would be wonderful! Thank you and I hope that you have a great day!"