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CRITIK
Corpse Party: Blood Drive is the direct sequel to Corpse Party: Book of Shadows, and is the first game featuring settings and characters rendered in 3D. Platform is PlayStation Vita, released in Japan in July 2014 by 5pb.. The characters are depicted in 3D chibi style, however traditional CG artwork appears during cutscenes, illustrated by Sakuya Kamishiro.
Game analysis
Critik Scorecard
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Reviews
10 reviews found80
Gamer Escape
Nov 1, 2019
Barring a few minor issues here and there, Corpse Party: Blood Drive continues to be one of the most enjoyable visual novels I’ve played. It’s campy, gruesome, a little fanservicey…so a lot like the scary movies I grew up with through a different cultural lens. If you’ve enjoyed the Corpse Party series so far, I highly recommend picking this up.
80
Japan Curiosity
Oct 20, 2015
Summary and quote unavailable.
70
Chalgyr's Game Room
Nov 11, 2019
Summary and quote unavailable.
60
Nintendo Enthusiast
Nov 5, 2019
Corpse Party: Blood Drive feels imbalanced between its exploration and visual novel aspects. Luckily, what I did enjoy, I got engrossed in, and there are moments of genius in both segments. But ultimately, the exploration feels like an afterthought compared to the visual novel component. It’s definitely hard to recommend unless you’re already a Corpse Party fan. Release Date: Oct.
60
FNintendo
Nov 5, 2019
Summary and quote unavailable.
60
Pure Nintendo
Nov 25, 2019
Despite the strong story and its interesting characters, the gameplay is very clearly of a game out of time, and so feels out of place on the Switch. It’s difficult to recommend, especially to newcomers, but fans of the franchise may find good reasons to visit, even if for nostalgia alone.
60
Game Revolution
Oct 14, 2019
Corpse Party: Blood Drive still has almost all of the same issues with its core gameplay, but the PC version is the definitive way to play the final chapter of the horror series. The original PlayStation Vita release was plagued with technical issues and they have all been ironed out for this re-release five years later.
50
Nintendo Life
Nov 7, 2019
Corpse Party: Blood Drive is the very definition of a mixed bag. Its 3D exploration aspects never quite work and just when you’re finally able to settle into playing the game, it suddenly switches back over to another visual novel stretch. Combined with poor pacing in the game’s early hours and a lack of any options to help explain the events of the prior games to new players, it feels like Corpse Party: Blood Drive struggles to decide what it wants to be, and despite the occasional show of strength in its writing and characterisation, it ultimately results in a frustrating, inconsistent experience.
40
Cubed3
Oct 28, 2019
The best parts of Corpse Party: Blood Drive is when the scenario demands only one playable character, isolated in a Twilight Zone Japanese meat-high-school. When these insufferable adolescents banter with each other, it clashes with any semblance of dread or horror. Their dialogue is obnoxious and petty, often commenting on the most superficial. Internal monologue fares much better, but some of the weird fetishised thoughts feel out of place at times. It is shocking that this was localised at all since this is such a weird franchise with some deranged sequences. There are far better Japanese horror games where a young school girl is the protagonist like the Yomawari games or Yumme Nikki; Blood Drive is only for those desperate for some cheap thrills.
NA
GameByte
Oct 23, 2019
Despite what you might think judging by style of the game, Corpse Party: Blood Drive is, first and foremost, a horror title. Unlike the first Corpse Party, both Book of Shadows and Blood Drive offer up a completely different style of gameplay, though the visual novel-style is still used for cutscenes.