RomWize

D2 - D no Shokutaku 2 (Japan)

also known as D2
Sega Dreamcast 💿 💿
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1999
78
Ad
✪ Reviewed on December 22, 2023
70

A strange and divisive Warp survival horror with a wonderfully dreamlike mood. Progression can frustrate, but the writing and visuals carve out their own niche. For the curious.

Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure 1 player 18+
Description
A photographer survives a snowstorm and discovers a hidden town populated by creatures in this Warp Dreamcast adventure. Published by Warp, released in Japan in December 1999. Mature action-adventure with snowy environment exploration, enigmatic creatures, atmospheric narration. Japanese version.

D2 - D no Shokutaku 2 review

MAX
Art direction
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
"Captivating"
Blinding white snow, heavy silences and unsettling creatures weave a singular atmosphere of polar dread. Kenji Eno's work bets on emptiness and cold light to settle a diffuse unease. This chilling mood, strange and inhabited, keeps a cult aura among enthusiasts.
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"Mild"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾0,71 GB 📅11/12/1999
Published by Warp

D2 - D no Shokutaku 2 (Dreamcast) price, value & rarity

Compare prices
Loading eBay listings…

An underrated gem

A strange, melancholy work by Kenji Eno, this adventure lost in a snowbound far north alternates exploration, combat and long contemplative stretches. Uneven and at times slow, it never truly found its audience outside Japan and the United States. But its spellbinding atmosphere and memorable soundtrack are worth the trip for fans of offbeat stories.

Is D2 - D no Shokutaku 2 still worth playing in 2026?

Released in 2000, Kenji Eno's project blends survival horror, exploration and turn based combat in a snowy far north. Laura wakes after a plane crash amid an unsettling organic mutation, and the story advances through scenes of strange poetry. The staging, the music and the icy atmosphere leave a lasting mark. The disjointed game system and repetitive encounters have aged, yet lovers of narrative oddities and fans of the author find a cult work with a unique charm worth experiencing today.

Similar games