Trapped in a gilded cage as the heir to a cutthroat corporate empire, you’ve spent years isolated from your mother and sisters under your father’s suffocating control. A late-night call reveals their fractured lives—and your mother’s muffled sobs ignite a reckless plan. Using your corporate training against your father, you forge a risky scheme to secretly reunite with your family during a summer “business tour.” But maintaining the facade grows treacherous as lies snowball, loyal subordinates grow suspicious, and your father’s surveillance tightens. One misstep could sever your family ties forever… or expose secrets darker than you imagined.
Gameplay
1. Dual-Life Simulator: Juggle daytime corporate duties (managing mergers, appeasing shareholders) while covertly plotting midnight escapes to visit family, using forged documents and bribed staff.
2. Relationship Web: Strengthen bonds with sisters through mini-games (e.g., decoding childhood ciphers, rebuilding a broken music box) to unlock flashbacks that reveal clues about your family’s estrangement.
3. Risk vs. Reward: Allocate limited “trust points” to manipulate allies—push too hard, and employees may betray you to your father; too softly, and your plans stall.
Key Features
1. Time-Bomb Narrative: Every in-game week shortens your window to escape as your father schedules an irreversible corporate takeover that would exile you overseas.
2. Environmental Storytelling: Decrypt hidden family lore through interactive objects (e.g., a distorted portrait with scratched-out faces, encrypted emails on office computers).
3. Moral Ambiguity: Sabotage rivals ethically—poison a tycoon’s deal to protect your family, but risk bankrupting innocent employees.
Pro Tips
1. Fake Loyalty: Publicly endorse your father’s harsh policies to earn “freedom points” used to loosen his surveillance.
2. Leverage Nostalgia: Gift sisters mementos from childhood to reignite their trust, making them riskier allies in your schemes.
3. Burn Evidence Wisely: Delete incriminating messages post-midnight—IT audits occur at 3 AM, but overuse erases critical clues.
Preview: