The Fairy's Song Image
Metascore
  1. First Review
  2. Second Review
  3. Third Review
  4. Fourth Review

No score yet - based on 1 Critic Review Awaiting 3 more reviews What's this?

User Score
tbd

No user score yet- Be the first to review!

Your Score
0 out of 10
Rate this:
  • 10
  • 9
  • 8
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 0
  • 0
  • Summary: Marnie is a young goth girl with a less-than-cheery disposition. Her parents are going away for a week of sun and surf in Bordeaux, and Marnie has been palmed off in her grandmother's care in the backwater English village Fenchapel.

    Fenchapel is a small village with a population below 500,
    Marnie is a young goth girl with a less-than-cheery disposition. Her parents are going away for a week of sun and surf in Bordeaux, and Marnie has been palmed off in her grandmother's care in the backwater English village Fenchapel.

    Fenchapel is a small village with a population below 500, without any shops or cinemas. Marnie's sure she'll be bored out of her skull and then, there's her grandmother's continued ravings about fairies.

    While exploring, Marnie happens upon a young female knight in a glade, clutching a sword. The knight has been sleeping for many centuries, but Marnie (inadvertently) awakes her. The young knight calls herself Leofe. She does not know why she went to sleep, but she knows that the forest itself is plagued by a horrible curse, and she is the only one who can lift it.

    Together, the two young girls go on an adventure. They learn of Fenchapel's storied past, and with the passing days, their feelings towards one another grow.

    Fenchapel, as it transpires, is far more interesting than Marnie imagined.
    Expand
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of 1
  2. Negative: 0 out of 1
  1. Jul 17, 2023
    70
    Sidestep the obvious criticism that there’s no interaction or choice to speak of in The Fairy’s Song, and you have one of the better kinetic visual novels. It’s polished to a crystal-like sheen, and the characters all grow to become endearing versions of themselves.