Hi fellow weirdos! Javi here again with another curious Japanese videogame of the early 90s.
For those familiar with the fantastically oneiric LSD: Dream Emulator game, the Osamu Sato name may ring a bell. Born in 1960, this digital artist and composer have a knack for creating, both visual and musical psychedelic aesthetics. One of his early works, and unfortunately not as well known as LSD is Eastern Mind: The Lost Souls of Tong Nou. While many specialized outlets define this game as a point-and-click adventure game, Sato defines it more as a CD-ROM experience. I understand it might sound like he is being snobbish just for the sake of it by making this distinction, but is fair to say that Lost Souls is indeed an experience difficult to classify.

Eastern Mind tells the story of a man named Rin who has lost his soul. To recover it, he borrows his friend’s soul for 49 days and goes to Tong Nou to die and be resuscitated nine times. Incorporating elements of Sato’s Buddhist beliefs, the game’s main theme is reincarnation, in which is said that karma influences birth and death, two endless processes. In fact, in the narrative, death is not depicted as a conventional game over. It is necessary to advance in the story since the MC will appear revived as another character.
I understand that this concept might sound too dense to be enjoyable at all. However, here’s when Sato’s unique visuals and music give it that push that makes the entire work memorable. For starters, Tong Nou takes the shape of an altered green version of the game developer’s head and inside each part of it, there are entire lands to explore. On the other hand, the character designs are surrealist and, at times, terrifying. Since the game glitches once in a while and speeds up some animations intensely, the whole atmosphere takes an insane. With the addition of an outstanding techno-house soundtrack, Eastern Mind becomes deliciously unsettling.

According to some sources, Osamu Sato planned to make a trilogy or sequel out of this game. Unfortunately, this never came to fruition. The game was released originally for Windows and Mac OS. It was planned to be released on PlayStation also, but this fell through. Due to its more limited release and probably, the non-mainstream themes and aesthetics, the game ended up becoming a rarity. Still, you can find many play-throughs of Eastern Mind online that let you look at this piece of wonderful weirdness that not many dare to explore, even now.
More Game Reviews
Breathtaking vistas, an Austrian setting, Elyse Levesque as a detective with a slight German accent, a cursed game, and a mix of Nordic noir and supernatural horror elements: this is… Some horror games want to scare you. Look Outside wants to crawl under your skin, settle in, and remind you of just how fragile you are — and it succeeds… Silent Hill is potentially coming for 2020. An industry insider has disclosed an upcoming announcement for Silent Hill at a future convention we cannot legally mention, which may or may… Evil Dead is a cult franchise in every sense of the idea – a variety of divergent media in the realm of comics, games, and merchandise; all humbly originating from… Kuon, developed by FromSoftware, is an atmospheric survival horror game released for the PlayStation 2 in 2004. Set in the Heian period of Japan, the game presents a gripping, eerie… Bramble: The Mountain King is a single-player adventure platformer video game, developed on the Unreal 4 engine by Swedish game developer Dimfrost Studio and published under Merge Studio. Dimfrost Studio…The Darker The Lake (2022) Movie Review – The Fear Frequency
Look Outside (2025) Video Game Review – An Unsettlingly Bleak Masterpiece of Indie Horror
Silent Hill 2020 almost confirmed. There was a source here, it’s gone now.
Evil Dead: The Game Review – The Fantasy of Every Evil Dead Fan
Kuon (2004) Video Game Review – A Forgotten Survival Horror Classic
Bramble: The Mountain King (2023) Video Game Review
Hi everyone! I am Javi from the distant land of Santiago, Chile. I grew up watching horror movies on VHS tapes and cable reruns thanks to my cousins. While they kinda moved on from the genre, I am here writing about it almost daily. When I am not doing that, I enjoy reading, drawing, and collecting cute plushies (you have to balance things out. Right?)






