Dear me, I was... Image
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  • Summary: A story told through beautiful visuals combining the rich watercolor-style aesthetics of Taisuke Kanasaki and rotoscope technology. Let the lifelike characters take you on an emotional journey.

    The story follows the life of one woman. It shows the joy, the sorrow, the growth, and the
    A story told through beautiful visuals combining the rich watercolor-style aesthetics of Taisuke Kanasaki and rotoscope technology. Let the lifelike characters take you on an emotional journey.

    The story follows the life of one woman. It shows the joy, the sorrow, the growth, and the struggles in her ordinary life.

    Experience her tale, her life woven together with others.
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Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of 2
  2. Negative: 0 out of 2
  1. Feb 24, 2026
    70
    At a runtime of just around forty-five minutes, Dear me, I was… respects your time while demanding your full emotional attention. It is “show, don’t tell” in a nutshell. It might not offer hundreds of hours of replayability, but the beauty of its silent world and the introspective journey it prompts are well worth it. For anybody looking to cleanse their palate with a deeply artistic, evocative, and conceptually daring title. I can safely say Dear Me, I was… is a highly recommended play. Or maybe you just want to witness an artistic flex on your console. It serves as a beautiful reminder of why we engage with this medium in the first place. To feel, to reflect, and to experience something truly unique through the power of interactive art.
  2. Mar 6, 2026
    70
    Dear Me, I Was tackles the challenge of telling a story without any text at all, and it does so with a fair amount of success. At the same time, however, it lacks the impact its emotional moments feel like they’re meant to have. Overall, it’s a short chronicle of a woman’s life that might make you reflect on your connections with the people around you.