-extra Speed- -raw- Shinshou Genmukan -: Epilogue 4

The version does the opposite. It throws you directly into the fire within the first three minutes. There’s no healing. There’s no quiet. Kyouko is already showing signs of the Genmukan’s echo—that spectral feedback loop where the mansion’s consciousness latches onto a survivor. The pacing is frantic, cutting between domestic scenes and sudden, violent flashbacks with almost no transition. It feels like the narrative itself is having a panic attack. You’re not reading about the descent; you’re in it.

Has anyone else decoded the hidden text in the manuscript burn sequence? I swear I saw a line that says, “The fourth epilogue is the first beginning.” Let me know in the comments. -Extra speed- -Raw- Shinshou Genmukan - epilogue 4

Is “Extra Speed – Raw – Shinshou Genmukan Epilogue 4” good? Yes. Is it enjoyable? Absolutely not. It’s a masterclass in using pacing (Extra Speed) and unflinching text (Raw) to deliver a nihilistic gut-punch that recontextualizes the entire base game. If you thought the True End was hopeful, this epilogue tells you that hope was just the first stage of a deeper, more insidious curse. The version does the opposite

This isn’t a literal racing term. In the context of the patch notes, “Extra Speed” refers to the narrative pacing. The base game’s epilogue 4 (the canonical follow-up to the True End where Kyouko and the protagonist survive) is a slow, melancholic burn. It’s about trauma recovery, rebuilding the shrine, and the quiet horror of everyday life after witnessing the supernatural. There’s no quiet

9/10 – A perfectly executed tragedy that respects your time by disrespecting your emotional stability.

In the eroge/VN world, “Raw” usually means unrendered, unpolished, or uncensored scripts. Here, it’s a deliberate artistic choice. The dialogue in this epilogue is brutal. No honorifics. No poetic metaphors. When Kyouko wakes up screaming, the text is literally: “Her throat tore. Sound didn’t come out. Just air. Just pain.” It’s clipped. It’s ugly.

The epilogue reveals that the protagonist has been unknowingly writing a memoir of the events. Every time he writes a passage, Kyouko loses a memory of the trauma. At first, this seems like a blessing. But by the midpoint, she’s forgetting him . She forgets their first kiss. She forgets the promise they made. She stares at him like he’s a stranger holding a notebook.