Tsukihime Remastered Site

If you own a Switch or PS4, A Piece of Blue Glass Moon is essential. It stands alongside Fate/stay night [Réalta Nua] as a gold standard for remasters—respectful, upgraded, and deeply atmospheric. Play it alone, at night, with headphones. Let the moon cast its pale judgment.

Score: 9.5/10
“A haunting return that proves some fairy tales only sharpen with age.”


Tsukihime: A Piece of Blue Glass Moon is available now in Japan and coming west via Aniplex. The Far Side routes await their crimson hour. tsukihime remastered

No discussion of Tsukihime is complete without acknowledging its audio identity. The original had a haunting, minimalist MIDI score that became iconic for its lo-fi eeriness. The remaster could have simply orchestrated those tracks. Instead, composer Hideyuki Fukasawa (known for Fate/Grand Order and Street Fighter) deconstructed them. The main theme is no longer a simple melody; it is a layered piece of ambient dread, using cello drones and discordant piano. The remaster also introduces full environmental audio—the rustle of leaves in the Tohno mansion, the distant hum of the city.

This sonic evolution respects the original’s intent rather than its limitations. The original’s silence was born of technical constraint; the remaster’s silence is a deliberate choice. When Shiki activates his Mystic Eyes, the sound design doesn't just play a sound effect—it briefly muffles all other audio, simulating the psychological isolation of seeing death itself. If you own a Switch or PS4, A

Let’s clear up the naming confusion. This "Remastered" release is, in fact, the official English localization of Tsukihime: A Piece of Glass Moon (which is the 2021 remake). It is not a remaster of the 2000 original.

Think of it as the definitive way to play the first half of the modern Tsukihime saga. Tsukihime: A Piece of Blue Glass Moon is

The Tsukihime Remastered PC port, released on Steam and the Type-Moon official store, is a surprisingly technical triumph. Unlike many Japanese PC ports that are locked to 1080p and 60fps, this one supports:

However, note the DRM. The Steam version requires the client to be online for the first launch. Performance-wise, the game runs on a potato; it is a 2D visual novel, so any PC from the last 10 years will run it flawlessly.