
This may well be the first game where I found my character standing at the edge of a body of water and I was dreading pushing on. The water of this game is deeply corrupted and sinister, which made me incredibly uncomfortable, and dreading what I knew was coming up each and every time I came across a pool of water or a waterfall through the adventure. It takes the natural beauty and tranquility of water, and sets it against the unnatural horror of ghosts and spirits. Project Zero: Maiden of Black Water is one such game. So when a game takes the motif of water and then makes it central to the entire narrative drive of the experience, it has a powerful emotional effect on me, by connecting it to something I do find so intensely beautiful. Related reading: Project Zero is exclusive to the Nintendo Wii U, but if you’re looking for a narrative horror game on another platform we recommend Until Dawn on the PlayStation 4. Water is truly a fascinating source of inspiration for an artist to work with. As something that can relax and revitalise us. And the way it interacts with people is just as interesting as a requirement to life, as a mirror. The motion of it, the elegance, the power of it.

It’s not just that water is so essential to life that it appeals to me it’s the aesthetics of water that I find so compelling. Give me a camera and I can spend a whole day photographing the ocean, a river or a waterfall, for example. A port to the Nintendo Switch was announced at E3 2021 for later that year.I have an fascination with water. The game, as typical of the series, is based on an eerie and horrifying content of navigating through dark haunted forests and environments whilst avoiding ghosts which can only be countered back with a special camera known as Camera Obscura that focuses on them with a 'fatal frame' (hence the American name of the series).

The North American version's only available digitally as an app to download on eShop, and wasn't released in a physical CD form unlike its Japanese and PAL counterparts. The game was initially released in Japan in September 2014, before being released in the other continents over a year later. Romaji: Zero: Nuregarasu no Miko) ( Project Zero: Maiden of Black Water in PAL regions) is the fifth entry in the Fatal Frame series and the first entry to be released on the Wii U.

Scripts Fatal Frame: Maiden of Black Water ( JP Japanese: 零 〜濡鴉ノ巫女〜.
