![]() It’s a setting that’s easy to see as mundane, but with this comes a mirror, allowing the player to hold their own experiences in front of No Longer Home and feel less alone. It isn’t so much a back-and-forth as a collaboration – everyone can add their own bits to the chatter to take it to more interesting places. ![]() It’s a system I really like, since you’re kind of playing as all the characters at once. With each conversation, you have a few options, allowing you to choose who makes the next statement. You’ll have friends over for one last BBQ, chat about the future, and complain about how much of a pain moving house is. The gameplay consists of wandering around the somewhat dilapidated living space and reminiscing over the lives the characters have lived over the last year. It’s a London flat after all – not a huge amount of space to go around. There’s no map screen, but it’s really easy to get to know the place. You explore their flat from an isometric angle, and can rotate each room to reveal more parts of it. ![]() The Home Office’s immigration policy is forcing Ao to move back to Japan when they aren’t ready to do so, and Bo must move back into their family home due to skyrocketing housing prices and a lack of direction in life. You follow the story of Bo and Ao, in their South London university flat for the final year of education.
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