You play as , a 12-year-old girl whose grandmother was a kamikiri (hair-cutting yokai). She lives in a rural post-WWII village built above a dormant seismic fault. After her grandmother’s death, a strange yarn ball rolls out of the family’s butsudan (Buddhist altar).
Weave. Or be woven. Have you encountered "thedungeoninyarnyonekinjidanchinoko"? Share your experience in the comments. Or don’t. The Jidanchinoko is listening through the fiber optic cables. thedungeoninyarnyonekinjidanchinoko
The yarn unravels, whispering: "Weave the dungeon. Cut the child." You play as , a 12-year-old girl whose
So, the next time you find a ball of mismatched yarn in your grandmother’s attic, ask yourself: Is that a loose thread, or an invitation to a dungeon? Share your experience in the comments
Halfway through, you learn that the Minotaur of this labyrinth is the Jidanchinoko : a child’s corpse fused into the fault line, wrapped in unstoppable yarn. It hums a warabe uta (children’s song) about "cutting the earth to find mother."
It is important to clarify that the keyword does not correspond to any known mainstream game, anime, manga, or light novel title as of my latest knowledge update.
Yone descends into the – a living labyrinth where every room is knitted from discarded funeral garments. The deeper you go, the more the yarn changes color: white (innocence) → red (anger) → black (death).