The Centennial Case- A Shijima Story Switch Nsp... -
Square Enix spared no expense with the production values. The video quality is crisp, the costume design perfectly reflects the 1920s, 70s, and modern eras, and the musical score—composed by industry veteran Yasushi Otani—builds incredible tension.
Centennial is closest to Obra Dinn in deduction style but with FMV instead of static dioramas. The Centennial Case- A Shijima Story Switch NSP...
Players assume the role of mystery novelist Haruka Kagami to solve a century-spanning chain of inexplicable deaths within the ill-fated Shijima clan. This guide explores everything you need to know about the game's plot, core gameplay mechanics, and technical performance when playing the digital Nintendo Switch version via its NSP/XCI file format. 🎬 Narrative Overview: The Shijima Family Curse Square Enix spared no expense with the production values
If you are looking for a game that respects the detective fiction genre, features stellar production values, and offers a fair-play mystery (where the clues are all there for you to solve), this is a "must-read"—or rather, a must-play. Just be prepared for a few tedious logic puzzles on your way to exposing the truth behind the Shijima family curse. Players assume the role of mystery novelist Haruka
Because the NSP is a direct digital dump of the cartridge/eShop version, it retains the 4K downscaled video for the Switch’s 720p (handheld) or 1080p (docked) screen. There is no streaming compression. Unlike some FMV games that rely on blurry YouTube-esque footage, this NSP plays the videos natively, resulting in crisp textures and clear subtitles.
Players use their hypotheses to deduce the identity of the killer and the truth behind the incident.