Atlus craft a feverish puzzle game where Vincent climbs blocks while his love life implodes, somewhere between adult anime and modern nightmare. The writing is delicious, the soundtrack sublime, and each nightmare night keeps you hooked.
Your verdict
Category
Adventure1 player18+
Description
Puzzle-action by Atlus and Deep Silver, Europe February 2012. Vincent Brooks is trapped between two women - girlfriend Katherine and mysterious Catherine - and must survive nighttime stone block nightmares. Timed block-climbing puzzles with push-pull mechanics, adult romantic thriller narrative and multiple endings based on moral choices. Unique narrative experience blending puzzle and visual novel.
Catherine review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
A bold marriage of stylish anime and dreamlike nightmare: design by Soejima, warm colours and impossible architecture compose a troubling, refined universe. The contrast between the everyday and nocturnal dread gives a strong identity. This art direction, elegant and singular, has no equivalent.
Torn between a steady partner and a troubling temptation, an ordinary man sinks into nightmares where his life is at stake. Bold in its adult subject, the tale explores commitment, guilt and the fear of growing up with rare frankness. This nocturnal fable, disturbing and clever, is like no other.
Between pin-up and nightmare, Catherine appears in a pop stylization of tart hues, mixing sensuality and dreamlike strangeness. The teasing composition and the vivid colors hide the dread of the dreams that haunt the game. Provocative and singular, it announces an adult title unlike any other.
Is Catherine still worth playing in 2026?
A singular Atlus hybrid, Catherine blends an adult story about romantic commitment with dizzying puzzle phases where you climb towers of blocks during nightmares. The Persona team art direction, the mature writing and the tension of the dilemma between two women make it a unique work. The high difficulty of the puzzles sometimes deters, but the blend of thinking and drama works remarkably. An excellent game for fans of snappy puzzle, adult storytelling and bold Japanese productions.