Why havent you heard of it?
Because the game isstrictly region locked.
This is unfortunate, because The Invisible Guardian rules.

When a friend introduced the Invisible Guardian to me, I was blown away by the high production values.
The game recreates its historical parameters in a stunning fashion.
After joining a fringe underground resistance group, the aim is to infiltrate Japanese-occupied Manchuria.

Xiao Tu meets a variety of colorful characters with different allegiances and hidden motivations.
The masterful writing humanises the characters, and becomes very tangible during important decisions.
Like many othervisual novels, the thrust of The Invisible Guardian is centered around your choices in conversation.

My friends and I spent hours guessing at agendas and identities, even when tasked with the simplest decisions.
If you’re not careful, you might lose everything you were fighting for at the beginning.
Is it worth it?
is the question that sticks with you throughout The Invisible Guardian.
Is it worth compromising your mission to store your relationships?
Or should you put your humanity to one side so that keep hold of your original dream?
Personal morality is another layer of being a spy.
Not all decisions lead to death, or what are traditionally considered to be bad endings.
Some of them, for example, might see you switch sides and betray your comrades.