Hi,
I wanted to revived/revisit this 2014 thread about games like Telltale's The Walking Dead label/count as visual novel genre. I know it's been 9 years since it's been last talked about. But there's been a lot of well change of views on what counts or classified as visual novels. What has changed over 9 years since the 2014 topic:
The popularity of Her Story (2015), even though it's live-action it plays a lot like a visual novels. It's not even made in Japan and yet it was able to gain mainstream popularity that no visual novels games from Japan was able to do.
After Her Story, it led to a wave of revival of FMV games, and more of narrative adventure choice-making games like for example Life is Strange, The Bunker, Late Shift, etc...
The popularity and re-release of retro video games from the 80's & 90's has led to re-release of early 90's FMV video game like Night Trap (yes, the cheesy FMV game that led to the creation of the ESRB), Double Switch, and earlier FMV games like Dragon's Lair, and Space Ace (both created by former Disney animator Don Bluth).
Now I know that click & point interactive games can sometime blurred the meaning/definition of visual novels. If that is the case then does that make Her Story a visual novel, I mean if any of you played the game you can probably may classified this as a visual novels.
So going back to the 2014 topic of classifying Telltale's The Walking Dead game as a visual novel. If 428: Shibuya Scramble is classified as a visual novel:
Then should Her Story, and these games be classified as visual novels too:
If you played Her Story, and/or Late Shift you can see characteristic of visual novels in them. Should these 2 games be re-classified as visual novel given the gameplay is neither RPG, first-person, third-person but it plays like a choice-making pathway found in visual novels. Does that extend to She Sees Red?
Again, does the gameplay in She See Reds now make it a visual novel?
What about early 90's FMV games like Night Trap, and Double Switch? Can they now be classified as visual novels by today's definition.
What about Dragon's Lair and Space Ace, can these be classified as visual novels too?
Do you think these games I mentioned from your POV should be given visual novels classification?