Exorcism Goddess -v0.99a- By Ahyana -
The v0.99a version is particularly praised/decried for a scene in Chapter 4 where the goddess must choose to possess a child to lure out a greater demon. The child’s scream is a real, unmodified recording of Ahyana’s own younger sibling—a fact disclosed only in the game’s README.txt . This blurring of art and life, allowed by the “not final” version label, is what makes 0.99a distinct from a polished 1.0. Exorcism Goddess -v0.99a- by Ahyana is more than an unreleased horror game; it is a statement on the nature of healing, divinity, and software itself. By releasing a version that is 99% complete—yet with that 1% of jagged edges, missing assets, and possible crashes—Ahyana argues that exorcism , like game development, never truly finishes. The goddess will always encounter one more demon. The build will always have one more bug. The player’s task is not to achieve perfect purification, but to sit with the incomplete and still call it sacred.
Author: Ahyana Analysis Prepared For: Digital Ludology & Indie Horror Archive Date: April 2026 Version Examined: v0.99a (Pre-Final Build) Abstract Exorcism Goddess -v0.99a- represents a notable entry in the niche genre of spiritual horror visual novels/interactive fiction. Developed by Ahyana, the game merges Shinto-inspired exorcism rituals with JRPG-style choice mechanics and goddess mythology. This paper examines the game’s structural design, narrative archetypes, and the symbolic function of the “Goddess” protagonist as both a gameplay mechanic and theological commentary. Special attention is paid to the v0.99a version status, which suggests a near-complete product whose remaining imperfections may enhance its thematic rawness. 1. Introduction Indie horror games have increasingly turned to non-Western spiritual frameworks to innovate beyond Christian demonology. Exorcism Goddess situates itself within this movement by casting the player not as a victim or priest, but as an incarnated goddess performing exorcisms. The version number “0.99a” is critical: it signals a work at the threshold of release, where minor bugs, placeholder assets, or unpolished transitions remain. Rather than seeing this as a flaw, this paper argues that v0.99a embodies a liminal state between creation and completion, mirroring the game’s central theme of boundary dissolution between the divine and the possessed. 2. Genre and Mechanical Framework Based on genre conventions of similar titles (e.g., The Coffin of Andy and Leyley , Faith: The Unholy Trinity ), Exorcism Goddess likely operates as a branching narrative visual novel with ritual-based quick-time events (QTEs). The player assumes the role of Amaterasu-no-Mikoto (or a fictional goddess surrogate), who descends into a corrupted modern city. Exorcism Goddess -v0.99a- By Ahyana
