

It’s a product of its era, for one thing. Let me tell you about my love for White Day. Are they gone yet? Just you and me left? Cool. Let’s give those dedicated few time to shuffle off. So it’s worth pointing out now that anyone who’s already played through the mobile version might have little interest in doing the exact same thing on a bigger screen at a tripled price point. That remake has now made its way to Western PCs, and for the first time in a totally legit and stable fashion. White Day received a recent face lift when it was updated for mobile gaming, to keep those pesky kids terrified on the move.

So, here’s a comment I never thought I’d utter: thank goodness for mobile games and their vastly cost-inflated re-re-ports onto PCs.

I first tried my hand at the game in 2005, making it roughly halfway through before numerous bug-outs and crashes ground my progress to a halt. Though it was finally brought to a wider audience with assistance from fan patches and questionable downloads, the original version never reached other territories as a stable build. It's a remake of a 2001 underground cult title that initially was available only in Korea. White Day takes place after hours, in a haunted schoolhouse. If you hit the bay window with the hanged body, you’ve gone too far.” “Turn the corner by the exploded carnivorous plant," I would say, "and your destination is the room next to the one with the angry spider girl trapped in it. I would genuinely love to be someone offering directions in Yeondu High School, the location in which White Day is housed. White Day: A Labyrinth Named School (PC) review
