N.E.R.O.: Nothing Ever Remains Obscure Reviews

N.E.R.O.: Nothing Ever Remains Obscure is ranked in the 10th percentile of games scored on OpenCritic.
47 / 100
May 28, 2015

Nero hopes to tell a touching story, but derivative gameplay, woeful technical issues, and a high price tag get in the way.

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Digitally Downloaded
Pierre-Yves L.
Top Critic
May 27, 2015

Nero is a beautiful contrast between light and dark, love and pain. It's not a fast-paced game, but rather a reflective, insightful, and emotional experience that is a very different kind of game that what we're used to. What starts as nothing more than a simple story of a woman and the man she loves, it quickly transforms itself into a heartfelt and wrenching story of a mother and her husband who go through one of the most wrenching, desperate series of emotions that a human being could experience.

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May 20, 2015

As a visual novel and piece of fiction, NERO is an absolute treasure. As an actual game, though, it is almost a complete disaster, with slow, boring gameplay and technical hiccups abound.

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4 / 10.0
May 15, 2015

I wanted to like Nero, I really did, but as the credits rolled all I could do was wish I could get my two hours back.

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Ken Barnes
Top Critic
4 / 10
May 15, 2015

Your mileage may vary depending on how much the story grabs you, but most will find that the asking price here is too high for what you get.

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Attack of the Fanboy
AOTF Staff
Top Critic
May 15, 2015

NERO is pretty to look at but is decidedly lacking when it comes to substance or involving players in the intricate story it's trying to tell.

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May 14, 2015

'Nero' may have some rough edges and frame rate problems, but the brief experience offers a genuinely affecting story that lives up to the 'interactive novel' billing.

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9 / 10.0
May 13, 2015

Even after finishing, it's difficult to pin NERO down to a concept or feeling that's easy to explain. It's a game that prioritizes emotion above all else, and it does so wonderfully. But as the boy at the heart of this tale learns, emotions are tough to understand, and thus NERO is tough to understand. You'll just know that you felt something, and that sensation alone is worth the journey.

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