At first glance, it reads like a regret-filled confession from a married man holding a suspiciously cheap used game console. But dig deeper, and you’ll find a cult phenomenon. This “repack” version—a term usually reserved for cracked, compressed game releases—has become emblematic of a very specific subgenre: .
In the original, buying anything triggers a distinct cash-register sound effect that Yukari can hear through the walls of the virtual house. The Repack replaces this with complete silence. However, the game’s code still logs the purchase. When you return home, Yukari will simply stare at the shopping bag and whisper, “I know.” No sound. No accusation. Just knowing. It’s terrifying.
| Ending Name | Unlock Condition | Emotional Damage Level | |-------------|----------------|------------------------| | | Buy nothing, return early. Yukari is suspicious but forgiving. | Low | | Retro Game Jackpot | Buy a rare Super Famicom game. Yukari finds the receipt. | Medium | | The Flea Market Friend | Meet an old female classmate at the market. Yukari sees a photo online. | High | | Washing Machine Testimony (Repack-only) | Buy the Mysterious Hard Drive AND a used washing machine part. Yukari reveals she sold your childhood gaming collection at the same flea market. | Catastrophic | tsuma ni damatte sokubaikai ni ikun ja nakatta repack
The Repack adds a junk item: a used external HDD with no label. If you buy it for 500 yen, you cannot open it until you return home. When you do, it contains a single text file reading: “I also go out without telling you. Love, Yukari.” This unlocks the “Mutual Deception” ending, widely considered the most unsettling piece of marital horror since The Gift (2015).
A 2023 survey by Meiji Yasuda found that 68% of Japanese married men hide at least one purchase from their wives per year, with “used video games” and “fishing gear” topping the list. The game taps into that specific anxiety: not of betrayal, but of disappointment by acquisition . At first glance, it reads like a regret-filled
The final ending— Testimony —has no dialogue options. The screen fades to black. Text appears: “You sit in silence. The new washing machine arrives tomorrow. It has no place for secrets.” Let’s be honest. The original game was a clever, short, anxiety-inducing experience. The Repack improves it in ways that feel almost cruel.
This article explores the origin, gameplay mechanics, emotional torture, and cultural resonance of the most passive-aggressive simulation game you never knew you needed to hide from your spouse. To understand the repack, we must first understand the original. The base game, Tsuma ni Damatte Sokubaikai ni Ikun ja Nakatta (abbreviated by fans as TsumaSoku ), launched in late 2023 as a low-budget PC title by the obscure Japanese doujin circle “Shiru no Kiroku” (The Record of Know). In the original, buying anything triggers a distinct
Chills. The original TsumaSoku was a modest hit, selling 12,000 copies on DLsite. But the Repack —uploaded to a certain anonymous torrent site on April 1, 2024—was downloaded over 500,000 times in two weeks. Why?