Netorase: Phone -v0.16.2-

The first “guest” is Tomo , a friendly, blandly handsome salaryman who flirts harmlessly with Saki during her shift. The Phone livestreams a grainy video from its perch behind the sugar caddies. Nothing happens — a hand touch, a shared laugh. But Kaito’s heart pounds. The banality is the point.

Most players uninstall after Encounter 3. Some keep playing, chasing an ending that doesn’t exist yet. And a few, in dark chat rooms, whisper that they’ve found a secret in v0.16.2 — a scene where Kaito finally turns off his screen, walks into the bedroom, and holds Saki without a word. No netorase. No phone. Just two people who forgot why they ever needed one. Netorase Phone -v0.16.2-

The “Phone” in the title is not a metaphor. It is the interface, the prison, and the key. Version 0.16.2, by its very numbering, announces itself as a work in progress — an early access psychological experiment more than a polished product. This is a game still finding its edges, and that rawness is precisely its power. You play as Kaito (default name), a mid-20s office worker in a long-term relationship with Saki , a college student and part-time café barista. The “Netorase Phone” is an old smartphone Saki finds in a lost-and-found bin — nondescript, running a mysterious, unremovable app called “ShareLink.” Once activated, the phone pairs with both Kaito’s and Saki’s devices, but with a sinister asymmetry. The first “guest” is Tomo , a friendly,

End of analysis.

“Finally, a netorase game that respects Saki’s interiority.” “The glitches make it feel real — like you’re actually spying, not watching a movie.” “Echo is the best antagonist since GlaDOS.” But Kaito’s heart pounds