20°

Last Window, the sequel to Hotel Dusk, will debut January 2010 in Japan

From Gamertell:

"Good news for fans of the Nintendo and Cing adventure game / visual novel Hotel Dusk: Room 215 - a sequel is on the way. A Japanese blog has leaked the news that Last Window: Mayonaka no Yakusoku, Last Window: Midnight Promise in English, is going to be released in Japan on January 14, 2010. Based on the informational image provided, it looks like it's going to carry a Cero B (Ages 12+) rating. "

Read Full Story >>
gamertell.com
8.0

Last Window: The Secret of Cape West Review (Pocket Gamer)

Pocket Gamer: "It's been a bumpy year for fans of the whodunit puzzler Hotel Dusk. First a sequel was announced in March, then there was speculation that we wouldn't be seeing it outside Japan, and finally a European release was set for September.

So it's a relief that Last Window: The Secret of Cape West is exactly the Hotel Dusk sequel we were hoping for."

Read Full Story >>
pocketgamer.co.uk
10°

ONM: Last Window: Midnight Promise Preview

CiNG is returning to the traditional gumshoe beat of Hotel Dusk: Room 215 with its sequel, Last Window. Kyle Hyde is back, in LA, in an apartment block full of crazies, in his crumpled raincoat.

Read Full Story >>
officialnintendomagazine.co.uk
10°

Lv42: Last Window (Hotel Dusk Sequel) Preview

Justin Potts of LevelFortyTwo.com gets hands on with the Japanese import of the Hotel Dusk: Room 215 sequel: "To point out that games are designed to be played seems self-explanatory to a degree (hopefully) forgoing any necessity for the comment. Created as an interactive form of narrative, the player's participation largely defines the experience, creates it, really.

"However, I've taken a different stance with Last Window: Mayonaka no Yakusoku (Promise in the Dead of Night), the successor to the mystery adventure cult hit Hotel Dusk: Room 215 from developer Cing and Nintendo, which garnered largely nothing but roaring cheers from players lucky enough catch wind of its mere existence and then make necessary strides in order to track down a copy. No, in this case, I've decided to present you with a preview having never laid hands on the title, not even for a moment, yet I'm approaching the final chapter as I write this."

Read Full Story >>
levelfortytwo.com