999 Developer Chunsoft Publishers JP Spike

NA Aksys Games Spike Release dates Nintendo DS

JP December 10, 2009

NA November 16, 2010

iOS

JP May 29, 2013

Vita/PS4/PC

WW March 24, 2017 Platforms Nintendo DS

iOS

PlayStation Vita / PS TV

PlayStation 4

PC

Zero Escape: Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors, also simply known as 999, is the first entry of the Zero Escape trilogy, the next two respectively being Virtue's Last Reward and Zero Time Dilemma.

The Nintendo DS version, the first version of the game, was developed by Chunsoft and published in Japan by Spike on December 10, 2009, and in North America by Aksys Games on November 16, 2010.

On May 29, 2013, the game was ported to iOS for iPhone and iPad and released in Japan. The port was named 9 Hours 9 People 9 Doors HD Smart Sound Novel, as it was released as part of the Smart Sound Novel series. The escape room puzzles were removed in favor of more focus on the visual novel aspects. The English version, titled Zero Escape: 9 Hours, 9 Persons, 9 Doors: The Novel, or simply 999: The Novel, was released on March 17, 2014 worldwide.

On March 24, 2017, Zero Escape: The Nonary Games, a bundle pack containing a remastered version of 999 with voice acting and a port of Virtue's Last Reward was released for the PlayStation Vita / PlayStation TV, PlayStation 4 and PC. More details on these ports are below as well as on its own article.

The game's genre is a mix of psychological horror, mystery, suspense, thriller, and science fiction, with slight elements of humor and comedy to fill in the gaps when the atmosphere isn't so dark. The game is divided into two parts; the "visual novel" parts in which the story is told and decisions are made to lead to branching endings; and the "escape" parts which are escape-the-room puzzles that break up the novel sections.

The story follows Junpei who is abducted and placed aboard an empty, sinking cruise liner along with eight other people. The cruise liner resembles the RMS Titanic, a ship which killed over 1500 in the early 20th century. The nine people are forced to participate in the "Nonary Game", a deadly game which involves numerical bracelets, small bombs in each player's stomach that will detonate and kill them if they disobey, exploring the ship and solving escape-the-room puzzles in order to survive and escape before they drown in 9 hours. The players also attempt to find out why they were kidnapped.

Spoiler warning : Plot and/or ending details follow.

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Plot

Note: This plot summary only contains the events of the Safe (also known as Zero Lost) ending and the True ending because the other endings aren't necessary for the True ending. For the other endings, see here.

The Nonary Game begins

"The water is rising, there are 9 doors and time is running out... Seek a door that carries a 9. 9 hours. That is the time you will be given to make your escape. Now, it is time. Let our game begin."

On November 1st, 2027, Junpei, a normal college student, awakens inside of a small locked room; his last memory is that of being incapacitated using an inhalational anaesthetic and then abducted by an unknown person in a gas mask around midnight. Junpei infers that he is aboard a ship based on his surroundings and discovers that a metallic bracelet with the number 5 on the electronic display has been affixed to his wrist. Junpei is forced to escape the room by means of solving puzzles within it before the room floods from a leaking window.

Junpei escapes to the upper decks and encounters eight other people, who are also fixed with their own bracelets with unique digits. Junpei identifies one of them as his childhood friend Akane Kurashiki. As they find that the ship is no longer taking on water, they are greeted by their unseen host over a loudspeaker. The host, Zero, informs them they are playing the Nonary Game, which they can only escape by finding a door marked with a 9 within nine hours; fail and the ship will sink and everyone on-board will drown. They learn of electronic devices called REDs and DEADs near each marked numbered door that assure that only three to five people whose bracelet numbers' total digital root equals the number on the door can pass through each door; otherwise, a small bomb planted in each person's stomach will be detonated, killing them. Each player has a number marked from 1 to 9.

As the group assign themselves code names (with the exception of Junpei whose name was accidentally revealed to the group by Akane earlier), they begin to plan their escape, as the 9th Man holds Clover hostage and forces Ace and Clover to help him through a numbered door (Door 5). 9 + 1 + 4 = 14 = 1 + 4 = 5. When the 9th Man ventures alone through it, he is killed when the bomb in his stomach detonates. The group opens the door to see his bloody corpse with scattered pieces of flesh and organs strewn across the floor.

Realizing that the game is real and anyone can die at any moment, the group proceeds to explore the ship, splitting into groups as necessary. The player has the option to select which group to travel with (Door 4 or 5) and other decisions that ultimately affect the fate of the game.

Door 4 or 5?

If Junpei chooses Door 4, he explores the 2nd class cabin and kitchen with Santa, June (Akane Kurashiki) and Lotus. In this pathway, based on the choices made, Junpei may hear some pseudoscientific stories about forms of morphic resonance communication, as well as stories of an Egyptian priestess who was supposedly frozen under a special liquid known as "Ice-9" that supposedly remains frozen at room temperature.

If Junpei chooses Door 5, he explores the 1st class cabin and casino with Snake and Seven.

Reunion

Regardless of which door is picked, all the players reconvene at the large hospital room which has three more doors: Doors 3, 7 and 8. Unfortunately, one player who is blind, whose codename is Snake, goes missing. After conducting a search and being unable to locate him, they decided that they had to move on through the next set of doors before time runs out. Lotus explained that the only way to allow the most players to proceed was to sacrifice someone and leave them behind. June opposed the idea but to allow the others to proceed, Ace volunteered to stay behind. He injected himself with an aesthetic called Soporil, knocking himself out, so that the other players could not take him with them.

Door 3, 7 or 8?

Junpei chooses Door 3, 7 or 8.

If Door 3, Junpei teams up with June, Santa and Seven and they enter the shower room.

If Door 7, Junpei teams up with Clover and Seven and they enter the operating room.

If Door 8, Junpei teams up with Lotus and Clover and they enter the laboratory.

Reunion and Snake's death

Once again, following their escapes, regardless of which door Junpei picked, everyone meets back in the hospital room.

Snake's corpse is found in the shower room behind Door 3, killed in a gory explosion due to him being shoved behind Door 3 and being unable to find the DEAD in time due to his blindness. Clover, Snake's younger sister, becomes distraught, suspecting that some of the other players must have forced Snake behind Door 3.

Doors 1, 2 or 6?

The next "set" of doors is 1, 2 and 6, which are scattered throughout the ship. The group holds a vote using a paper pile, but Junpei rigs it so that he votes last and is able to go through Door 1, 2 or 6 at his own volition.

If Door 1, Junpei teams up with Ace and Clover and they enter the chart room and Captain's Quarters.

If Door 2, Junpei teams up with Seven and Lotus and they enter the confinement room and torture room.

If Door 6, Junpei teams up June, Santa and Ace and they enter the steam engine room and cargo room.

Safe / Zero Lost Ending

The player is required to experience the "Safe" (Zero Lost) ending in order to access the "True" ending which will otherwise end prematurely with a "To Be Continued" message via the Coffin ending. In order to get the safe ending, the player must go through Door 5, then 8, then 6.

In the cargo room, Junpei soon discovers from Santa that Ace owns a company called Cradle Pharmaceutical and thought that he may be suffering from prosopagnosia. While no one else is looking, Ace also secretly takes a revolver in a coffin.

After discovering the chapel and finding the two Door 9s, the group met up with Lotus and Seven near the central staircase. They told them that Clover was missing and the players split up to go try to find her. Junpei took June with him and the two searched the large hospital and the shower room. In the shower room, Junpei realizes that the body there is not Snake's since it has a bone from its left arm, and he remembers Clover telling him in the laboratory that Snake's was prosthetic.

It turns out that Clover was murdered by an unknown assailant, possibly the same murderer as her brother Snake. Clover's body is discovered inside the first class bathroom with a safe, which Junpei passed through earlier. After a cryptic note found in Clover's hand allows Junpei to figure out the combination to the safe, he opens the safe, inside which is information that sheds some light on Zero's true motives. Nine years ago, the First Nonary Game was held, and it is revealed that members of the current party were involved in it. Among these members is Zero's primary target; Gentarou Hongou, the CEO of Cradle Pharmaceutical.

After concluding that Zero set up a decoy to be murdered in Snake's place, and that Ace is a prosopagnosia patient, Junpei accuses Ace of murdering both the decoy and Clover, and claims that Ace is in fact Gentarou Hongou himself. During the second Nonary Game, Ace lured the 9th Man to act as he did to test the seriousness of the game and to avoid his identity being revealed, as well as obtain the 9 bracelet he possessed. Thus, Ace has killed the 9th Man, the decoy Snake, and Clover so far.

Ace eventually admits to the allegations, and holds Lotus up at gunpoint in order to escape after she attacks him. He also reveals that he orchestrated the 9th Man's death in order to obtain the 9th Man's bracelet and protect his true identity. Junpei, Seven, Santa, and June pursue Ace, but Santa and June decide to stay behind when June starts feeling weak and feverish.

In the chapel, Junpei also discovers that Snake is alive, and was locked inside a coffin and dresses in mysterious cult-like robes. Junpei and Seven omit the details of Clover's death from Snake. Junpei, Seven and Snake exit the final 9th door and find themselves at the entrance to an incinerator, which Snake instructs them to open and enter.

Inside the incinerator they encounter Ace, who's still holding Lotus at gunpoint. Ace reveals to Snake that he killed Clover (something Junpei and Seven were unable to tell Snake in fear of Snake becoming mentally unstable), causing Snake to fly into a rage and attack Ace. However, even after using up all his revolver bullets, Ace is unable to successfully kill Snake. Snake pins him down, vowing to burn along with him when the incinerator activates. Seven and Lotus force a distraught Junpei out of the incinerator, while Ace and Snake get locked inside and burn to death.

Junpei decides to go back to retrieve June and Santa, and finds a very ill June inside the chapel. Zero then speaks up, telling Junpei that the game is over, and the loser has been decided. When Junpei insists that he hasn't lost yet, Zero reveals that he was referring to himself as the loser. Junpei notices a door close, and thinking he might find Zero, leaves June to check it out. He doesn't find anyone, and when he returns, June has disappeared. Shocked and anguished, he cries out for her before being knocked out by a Soporil gas grenade.

True Ending

After receiving the Safe ending, the True ending can be unlocked. This is because Junpei, an esper, is capable of remembering information across different timelines (and in the True ending, he remembers the information he hears in the Safe ending). In order to get the True ending, the player must go through Door 4, accept a clover bookmark from Santa, listen to a conversation about ice in a freezer instead of leaving, go through Door 7, ask Seven if he knows about Ice-9 when the opportunity arises, give Clover the clover bookmark when prompted (to prevent her going axe crazy), then enter Door 1.

Junpei decided to go with Ace and Clover through Door 1, leaving Santa, June, Seven, and Lotus to go through Door 6. Junpei and his group opened up the Earth door and go into Door 1, finding themselves in the Chart room. While sending Ace to investigate the other half of the room, he tried to start a private conversation with Clover, asking her to finish her story from the operating room. She refused, saying that she did not want to talk about it, but asked him about whom he suspected to have killed Snake. The only possible option had everyone except Junpei, June, and Clover working together. Junpei dismissed it as unlikely, and Clover agreed, suggesting Santa and Seven killed Snake. Clover started to elaborate, but Ace interrupted them. He told Junpei that he wanted to talk to him and the two left for the wheelhouse. He told Junpei that he knew about Junpei's "trick" to get the door he wanted by reaching into his pocket for the papers. Junpei later found the pocket watch needed to open the exit and the three of them continued on. Practically right outside the door was the Captain's quarters.

They found a corpse of a man wearing a captain's outfit, a bracelet on his wrist that had "0" on its face, and a bloody axe next to his body. He asked Clover if she also thought the dead man they nicknamed 'Cap' was Zero but she insisted that Zero was one of the players. Junpei also noticed that it would be too obvious if the dead man was Zero, as the clues in the room felt too contrived. He and Clover examined the body closely for more clues and mentioned that he had an easy death compared to Snake's, who had a bone sticking out of his left arm. Clover quickly changed her expression to a look of surprise. She asked if Junpei was sure if it was the left arm and he confirmed it.

Suddenly, she started crying and leapt in Junpei's arm, thanking him and told him that Snake was still alive somewhere. She also thanked him for the bookmark that he gave her, and he mentions that Santa gave it to him. Clover said that Santa must have been one of the subjects on the ship with her brother, because he knew the "leaf words". Clover decided to finish up her story about the experiment that happened on the ship. She revealed that the Nonary Game was played on the ship. Clover mentioned that a girl died on the ship Snake was on. Clover was about to reveal her name, but Ace interrupted them again.

After escaping the room, the three rushed down the central staircase to meet up with the other players. An excited June told them that they found Door 9 and, full of excitement, they rushed to the elevators. Door 9's location turned out to be the chapel and to Junpei's surprise, there were two sets of Door 9s. That meant everyone could escape but Clover calculated all of the possible combinations and concluded that if four people go, three stay behind, and if three go, four stay behind. Seven attempted to sacrifice himself so the other six can leave, but was met by harsh criticism from the other players. Santa spoke up and flatly stated that he was against leaving Seven alone. Santa quickly got out a golden revolver and held June hostage. He ordered Ace and Lotus to authenticate at the big Door 9. Santa forced them through the door and after nine seconds, it closed, leaving Junpei, Clover, and Seven alone in the chapel.

As the room became quiet, they heard a pounding noise. They quickly looked around the room for the source of the noise and soon found it was coming from the coffin. A keypad was on it but no clues on the password for it. While Junpei was thinking, a mysterious voice in his head told him the sinister hand tip. He pressed his buttons on his bracelet in the correct order and eight numbers blinked on the display (14383421). He typed in the numbers on the keypad and the lock on the coffin opens. To their surprise, Snake emerged out of the coffin, although he was wearing mysterious religious robes. Clover leapt into Snake's arms and tearfully welcomed him back to the group.

After Clover calmed down, Junpei and Seven told him everything that happened since he was gone. They asked him why his clothes were replaced, but the only thing he remembered was being knocked out by soporific gas while looking for the RED parts. Snake mentioned that it was 4:30 already and that they had to get moving. They authenticated and the small Door 9 opened. Before they entered, Junpei quickly wanted to see what the value of the captain's bracelet was. After some testing, they found that the bracelet had a value of 6. Snake assumed that June's bracelet was flipped and that it was actually 9 and that Santa's bracelet worked as the 0 bracelet. Snake inferred that Santa was Zero and that he set the entire game up.

Running out of time, they proceed through the small door 9. Searching the hallway that led from the door, they found a door with a Neptune symbol on it. They didn't have the key to open it, so they looked around more, eventually finding a door with a Uranus card scanner next to it. Junpei opened the door and they found themselves in a huge library. Junpei remembered that ALL-ICE might be nearby and started his search. While they were searching for a way out, Junpei confronted Snake and asked him to tell him about the experiment that happened 9 years ago.

They move up to the top floor and Snake starts talking. He was told to keep quiet of the events 9 years ago in the braille message Zero gave him. Snake was sure that even if Zero was Santa, he wouldn't kill them because he was in the same group as Snake. Snake told him that the experiment was organized by Cradle Pharmaceutical and the details of the experiment. Before they leave, Junpei asked if Snake was sure there were 18 kids in the experiment since the news reported on 16. The two remaining kids had no relatives known but their names were Aoi and Akane, Akane being the girl that died during the experiment. Shocked at Snake's answer, Junpei started to ponder whether the Akane Snake was talking about was the same person as June. Since Snake did not reveal her last name, so Junpei reassured himself that they were not the same person.

In the study, Junpei is told of the events leading up to this point. Nine years ago in November 2018, Cradle Pharmaceutical, led by CEO Gentarou Hongou, kidnapped nine sets of siblings (18 children in total) for an experiment involving morphic fields after testing their potential in the Ganzfeld Experiment. Hongou's desire was to understand morphic fields to try to cure his prosopagnosia (facial blindness). People are more easily able to access morphic fields under conditions of "epiphany" and "danger" — thus, trying to solve problems in a life-and-death situation, exactly what the Nonary Game sets up.

The kidnapped children included Snake (true name Light) and Clover, and Santa (true name Aoi) and Akane, as well as Lotus' children, twins Nona and Ennea. One of each set of siblings was to be placed aboard the Gigantic in the Atlantic Ocean, the sister ship of the RMS Titanic, the others in Building Q, a secret facility in the Nevada desert, that both had identical interiors. Both sets of children were to play the Nonary Game with those in the building, solving the puzzles and telepathically sending the solutions to those aboard the ship. However, the experiment went awry: Akane was misplaced, put alongside her brother Santa/Aoi on the ship rather than sent to Building Q.

Seven, a detective at the time, discovered Cradle to be behind the kidnappings, and was able to rescue the children in the incinerator on the ship using a makeshift rope made of bedsheets. As they fled, Hongou recaptured Akane and forced her back into the incinerator room to continue the experiment alone. She was unable to solve the Sudoku puzzle to escape the incinerator, and apparently died. However, Akane (June) has been playing the Nonary Game with Junpei and the rest of the group the whole time, implying a mysterious paradox.

Junpei, Clover, Seven, and Snake catch up to June, Ace, Santa, and Lotus in the incinerator. Akane notices Junpei and tells him not to worry about her. Sometime in the next few minutes, she sneaks out of the incinerator while Junpei and the rest of the group aren't looking. Ace holds Lotus hostage with Santa's revolver and forces her to authenticate. The door does not open, to Ace's dismay. He tries over and again, but the door still won't budge.

Seven then charges at Ace and floors him. Junpei, using logical reasoning, gets Ace to confess to the murder of the 3 other executives of Cradle Pharmaceutical and he is shocked to find that Snake is still alive. Junpei also reveals that Ace was being manipulated by Zero to purposely kill the other executives and that he concluded to have done did it so he could get revenge for the events of the First Nonary Game.

Since Junpei thinks Santa is Zero, he questions him and he admits that he is Akane's brother, but that he is not Zero, but merely an assistant to Zero. Santa says that this whole Nonary Game was set up so Junpei could save Akane from dying in the incinerator in the past.

The player learns that the gameplay they have witnessed has been through the viewpoint of young Akane during the first Nonary Game. She was able to connect to Junpei in the second Nonary Game nine years in the future through morphic fields and watch his actions. Akane was able to see multiple futures for Junpei depending on his choices (i.e. the multiple endings), and is able to provide him with guidance as to which choices will succeed.

Junpei and the group also learn that Zero is really Akane assisted by Santa/Aoi, having created the second Nonary Game to guide Junpei to the same puzzle in the incinerator that Akane faced nine years earlier. Santa/Aoi begins the incineration process. Junpei, under duress and linked by the same situation, is able to communicate back to young Akane, and demonstrates the solution to the puzzle to her. In addition, young Akane gives Junpei a string of additions: 2 + 4 + 5 + 7 + 8, which is the solution to open Door q. Back in the past, young Akane reunites with Seven, Aoi, Light, and the other children, and escapes the Gigantic ship with Seven in a rowboat before it sinks into the Atlantic Ocean.

In the present, Junpei and his friends escape, discovering they were not inside either the Titanic or Gigantic, but rather, Building Q in the Nevada Desert all along, and that their bracelets did not contain detonators (except for Kubota and Nijisaki). Outside, they find an SUV with Ace tied up in the trunk, and they drive off, hoping to catch up to Aoi and Akane. They encounter a female hitchhiker in Egyptian clothing, who Junpei recognizes to be Alice, and Clover stops the car to let her on.

Other Endings

Coffin - Obtained if the player attempts to receive the True ending (4 > 7 > 1) without obtaining the Safe ending first. This is a rather useless ending since clearing the True ending will clear this ending.

Submarine - Junpei finds a submarine in a storage room, but Ace kills everyone before they can escape. Obtained by choosing Door 2 on any route. In the DS and The Nonary Games version, choosing Door 3 on any route forces the player into Door 2, meaning both Door 2 and Door 3 lead to this ending.

Knife - Junpei finds Lotus' corpse. Suddenly, Junpei is killed by Ace with a knife to the back. There are three possible ways to obtain this ending: Doors 4 > 7 > 6, Doors 4 > 8 > 6, or Doors 5 > 7 > 6.

Axe - Clover, distraught by Light's supposed death, secretly kills Santa and Seven in revenge. She also kills June because she got in the way. Later, she throws their bracelets (3, 7 and 6) on the floor and tells Junpei they can escape with them. To Junpei's horror, he remembers the bracelets are removed if a player dies. Clover offers Junpei the opportunity to escape with her (4+5+0=9), but she kills him with an axe. Obtained by choosing Door 1 on any route and not following the True ending path by failing the any of the story checks (don't accept bookmark, don't listen to freezer in conversation, don't talk to Seven about Ice-9 or don't give the bookmark to Clover)

Syringe (iOS version only) - Clover kills Junpei with a syringe and leaves him to drown. This ending is obtained by going through Door 3 on any route in the iOS version.

Characters

Image Name &

Voice Actor (Remake) Description Ace

Takaya Hashi

(JP)

Richard Epcar

(EN) (Bracelet #1) A tall, grave older man with a streak of gray in his hair, he is often the voice of calm reason when events descend into chaos. His bracelet number is 1, hence the name Ace. Snake

Takahiro Sakurai (JP)

Taliesin Jaffe

(EN) (Bracelet #2) A young man with a princely demeanor, he is an unending source of information, but tends to only reveal it when there is no other option. His bracelet number is 2, from the term "snake eyes". Ironically, Snake is blind but that does not stop him from being able to work as well as another normal person. Santa

Kishō Taniyama (JP)

Sean Chiplock (EN) (Bracelet #3) Little more than a punk with silver hair and a bad attitude at first glance, this clever guy keeps pushing forward and doesn't like dealing with indecisiveness. His bracelet number is 3 so his name comes from "san", the Japanese word for "three" and that he references Santa Claus several times. Clover

Yukari Tamura (JP)

Wendee Lee

(EN) (Bracelet #4) Prone to rapid swings of emotion, this pink haired girl doesn't hesitate to speak her mind or put people in their place. Her bracelet number is 4 so her codename comes from the four-leaf clover, which is a symbol of good luck. She is the sister of Snake and so does everything to try to stay with him, unless he goes against her intentions. Junpei

Tatsuhisa Suzuki (JP)

Evan Smith

(EN) (Bracelet #5) The main protagonist of the game. After he wakes up to find he's been transported to a strange location, he takes it upon himself to figure out all the cryptic clues and ensure the survival of everyone trapped with him. His bracelet number is 5 and is the only one not to choose his own codename due to June accidentally mentioning his name. June

Miyuki Sawashiro (JP)

Rena Srober (EN) (Bracelet #6) The childhood friend of Junpei. Akane Kurashiki is her actual name, although she chooses the codename June once she accidentally reveals Junpei's name. She is a delicate girl who wants no one to be left behind during the Nonary Game. Her bracelet number is 6, from the month June. Seven

Kenta Miyake (JP)

Edward Bosco (EN) (Bracelet #7) A large, bumbling mountain of a man, his appearance and behavior hide an intelligent mind well-equipped for solving problems. His size gives him the strength to do certain functions that only he or Ace are able to do. His bracelet number is 7 and obviously, his codename is his bracelet number. Lotus

Rie Tanaka (JP)

Valerie Arem

(EN) (Bracelet #8) A self-serving, barely-dressed woman with unknown skills and knowledge, she does whatever she can to find her way out. Her bracelet number is 8 and Lotus comes from the flower itself, which has 8 petals. 9th Man

Nobuo Tobita

(JP)

Cam Clarke (EN) (Bracelet #9) A fidgety, nervous man from the start, he knows more than he's letting on. The 9th Man is the only one who does not get to pick what his codename is so the rest of the players refer to him as the 9th Man during the Nonary Game. Zero

Unknown The cloaked figure in a gas mask who kidnapped Junpei, Zero is the mastermind behind the Nonary Game. Their identity is a mystery and what their motives are for putting the 9 players in the Nonary Game are unknown.

Gameplay

The gameplay is divided into two parts:

The puzzle part is when the player must solve the puzzles that are blocking their way in order to progress through the game. There are 16 escape rooms in total. The game also contains a calculator with a digital root function to aid in escape rooms.

The visual novel part in which the player can talk to the other characters and make decisions that affect the story of the game. Junpei or the other characters may die depending on what doors and dialogue choices the player makes.

There are 6 endings in total (one exclusive to the iOS version). The player's decisions affect which ending is received. Only one ending is the true ending.

Unfortunately, the player must re-watch cutscenes and re-solve the puzzle rooms to obtain all the endings in the DS version. This was fixed in the iOS, Vita, PS4 and PC versions which added a FLOW Chart.

In the iOS version, the escape room puzzles were removed in favor of narration of the events that happened in the room. The story is now presented in a comic book style and a flow chart that allows the player to skip to different parts of the plot. Because of the bottom screen being removed, the narration appears in the same screen as the dialogue. While in an escape room, only the cutscenes are seen in each room.

Although in-game the ship will sink in 9 hours, there isn't a single time limit in the entire game so the player can play the game and solve all of its puzzles at their own pace.

Memories of the Escape

There is a minor feature in both the DS version and The Nonary Games version of 999 called "Memories of the Escape". It is unlocked after obtaining at least one ending. It will let the player revisit and replay escape rooms that they have already cleared in the main story. They are listed in order of the endings that the rooms were visited in (True Ending, Safe Ending, Submarine Ending). The difference in the escape rooms is that it skips any and all of the interactions between Junpei and the players during cutscenes, instead replacing them with "I feel like something has happened here". Escape rooms that haven't been unlocked have a picture of which door they are behind.

Escape rooms

Note that the Incinerator is not an escape room in either ending (but it does have a puzzle in the True ending). Excluding the Door 9 visited in the Safe ending which contains no escape rooms, the character who travels through the most doors with Junpei is Seven, with 5. Clover is in second place with 4. Akane, Santa and Lotus are all tied at 3. Ace and Snake are tied at two, and the 9th Man never goes with Junpei or anyone else into an escape room since he dies at the beginning of the game.

Music

The soundtrack for the game was composed by Shinji Hosoe.

Some of these songs are also used in Virtue's Last Reward, as well as remixed in Zero Time Dilemma. The four remixed songs for Zero Time Dilemma are Extreme Extrication, Trepidation, Riddle and Puzzle and Morphogenetic Sorrow.

The iOS version of the game features higher-quality music compared to the compressed DS version. A fan-rip of the iOS music can be found here.

Disc One

Disc Two

Reception

999 received generally favorable reviews from critics, with several near perfect scores emphasizing its well-written suspenseful story, presentation, characters, music, and escape-the-room gameplay. Critics have also praised its experimental hybridization of visual novel, puzzle and "choose your own adventure".

In the following years since its release, 999 and the Zero Escape series have gained a bit of a cult following in its fandom, primarily in the anime and video game fan community, and it has inspired a lot of fan material such as cosplay, music, fan-fiction, art, etc.

However, this isn't to say the game is perfect by any means. For the majority of the game, it is portrayed as a realistic murder detective mystery, and then at the end of the game, paranormal and supernatural ideas are introduced such as time paradoxes, morphogenetic fields, and communicating through time. These paranormal plot twists may be off-putting to some players and viewed as poor writing (depending on the opinions of the player), in the same vein as Indigo Prophecy. However, in defense of this aspect of the game, it can also be argued that these ideas are gradually introduced in conversations, such as Lotus explaining the morphogenetic field early in the game in the 2nd class cabin. There are also some strange plot points, for example:

Junpei apparently did not know his childhood best friend had a brother, or is unfamiliar with Aoi for some odd reason, or perhaps can not recognize him.

A plot contrivance, done in order for Clover to not be with her brother when he disappears, is that the players didn't question someone blind searching the rooms for the missing RED. Clover also left him alone, despite that some of the rooms could also be booby trapped, and despite that she was upset by them separating at Door 4/5.

In the Submarine Ending, Ace kills six people with a knife because he is so talented at killing people. Although the murders themselves aren't depicted with the exception of Junpei's so how he did so is open to interpretation.

There is some criticism pertaining to the DS version. Many players were dissatisfied with the amount of repetitive tutorials in the beginning of the game, and having to re-do the same escape rooms in order to achieve another ending. For example, if the player wants to achieve all six endings, they must solve the 3rd class cabin six times (although since the Coffin ending is essentially useless and its icon is automatically obtained if the player receives the True ending, the player can skip it, but they still must solve the 3rd class cabin five times). This was rectified in the game's remaster and two sequels which added flow charts. In the DS version of the game, it is possible to fast forward text that is already read using the d-pad, however, there is no auto advancing text, so newcomers of the DS version should expect a lot of tapping, clicking and reading. The 999 remaster features an auto-advance mode.

One point of criticism is its pacing. The urgency portrayed in the game's story sometimes may seem at odds with the tone or timing of conversations, such having a lengthy scientific conversation about the properties of ice while three people are trapped inside a freezer and are slowly freezing to death in order to receive the true ending.[1]

Also criticized was the game's horror atmosphere: the players often crack lighthearted jokes about things such as foot fetishes and blue liquid being alien blood after dead bodies are found in the ship, although they are likely doing it to improve their mood.

Platform differences

999 has had multiple releases on multiple platforms. However, given its voice acting and features, the PS4/Vita/PC version, Zero Escape: The Nonary Games could be considered definitive.

Essentially, in order from best to worst:

Zero Escape: The Nonary Games for PS4/Vita/PC Nintendo DS version iOS version

Due to its absence of puzzles, the iOS version is the least preferable version of the game, even below the DS version. However, the DS version has low pixelated graphics (256 × 192 per screen) and compressed music quality, and no flow chart meaning the player must solve the first escape room five or six times if they want all six endings. All of these problems were fixed in the iOS/PC/PS4/Vita versions, but it is difficult to recommend the iOS version at least to someone who never played the DS version.

The iOS version has a flow chart, HD art, high quality music, and an additional minor ending called the syringe ending. However, it has no character animations (just about 8 or 10 static portraits for each character), no voice beeps (the DS version has different tones of voice beeps to make it seem like the characters have voices, such as Clover having a high-voice pitch beep and Seven having a low-pitch voice beep), and no escape rooms.

For more information on the PS4/PC/Vita versions, please visit its own article.

Trivia

999 received two novelizations called the 999: Alterna Novels , with the second part being a continuation and conclusion to the first. They were only released in Japanese, although they were translated by two separate fans twice - not because one felt the other's translation was inferior, but they simply did not know there was another fan-translation occurring at the time. One translation is available here.[2][3] The other translation is here.[4] Summaries of differences between the game are here.[5][6] The author of the novel is actually very knowledgeable about the game - as such, the structure of the novel is very similar to the game, although they wanted to introduce new plot elements. "Alterna" can mean "alternate", and the premise of the novel is "What if the Nonary Game was played differently?" As such, it has several plot differences: The novel is only set in one timeline, while the game uses the Safe and True timelines to reach the finale. As such, Clover is never killed and there is no "Safe Ending moment" where Snake dies with Ace in the incinerator. The novel is not "choose your own adventure". Junpei enters Door 4 then 7. At the next options, because there is no paper pile vote, initially Junpei, June and Clover think about entering Door 6 while Ace, Santa, Seven and Lotus think about entering Door 1. However, Santa forcibly puts his hand on the scanner. This means Junpei, June, Santa and Ace enter Door 6 while Clover, Seven and Lotus enter Door 1. However, unlike the game, the two teams end up uniting past their doors and get to explore the chart room together (as Door 6 leads there now instead of the steam engine room). Once they're done, Akane becomes a "ghost" (technically, she always sort of was) and disappears from existence. In the chapel, Santa reveals he is Zero and goes through Door 9 with Ace and Clover. Junpei, Seven and Lotus find Snake in the coffin and go through the other Door 9. After Junpei saves Akane's life in the past, Akane "unghosts" because her existence is secured. This means the novel ends on a happier note with Akane and Junpei reunited together, instead of the game where Akane ditches Junpei in a SUV. Light becomes blind by falling off of a cliff instead of in a car accident, while trying to help Clover. Light gives the rest of the children four-leaf-clover accessories instead of actual four-leaf-clovers, which is immensely more realistic, although in the game, it's possible that he simply lied about the clovers being real to cheer everyone up. Clover has one of the four leaf clover accessories from the first Nonary Game. Nona shares the same fate as Akane where her existence is not secured. Akane saves Nona from falling off the ship and drowning during Seven's rescue attempt, but this somehow results in both girls existing oddly. They are alive, but seemingly unseen by most people. After the events of the Second Nonary Game, a twenty-one-year-old Nona is finally reunited with her mother. Akane has amnesia during the Second Nonary Game when she is June. Ace dies at the end of the novel in a similar fashion to the 9th Man. Santa is Zero, not Akane. Akane was unaware and oblivious of the Nonary Game that Santa planned. The final puzzle is a Rubik's Cube and is not located in the incinerator.

received two novelizations called the , with the second part being a continuation and conclusion to the first. They were only released in Japanese, although they were translated by two separate fans twice - not because one felt the other's translation was inferior, but they simply did not know there was another fan-translation occurring at the time. One translation is available here.[2][3] The other translation is here.[4] Summaries of differences between the game are here.[5][6] The author of the novel is actually very knowledgeable about the game - as such, the structure of the novel is very similar to the game, although they wanted to introduce new plot elements. "Alterna" can mean "alternate", and the premise of the novel is "What if the Nonary Game was played differently?" As such, it has several plot differences:

Uchikoshi acknowledged 9 is an unlucky number in Japan. 9 in Japanese is "ku" (苦) and can be translated as "pain, ill, suffering, agony, torture". As such, 9 holds a widespread superstition in Japan. When the cover of 999 is flipped upside down, it becomes 666, another number with a lot of occult superstition. It is unknown if this an intentional illusion or coincidence. One of the major plot points in 999 is June's/Akane's bracelet appearing to be 6, but is actually an upside-down 9. In the sequel, K appears to be doing a 666 gesture in his official art. In the sequel, an occult organization known as Free the Soul is introduced which uses a suicide virus known as Radical-6.



"What the hell" is said around 162 times in the game.(Control + F "what the hell")

A free watch bracelet was included in pre-orders.

The DS version of 999 has the sound of an engine starting up to play if the DS is closed and reopened.

The DS version of 999 is playable on 3DS via backwards compatibility.

The DS version of 999 can also be played on a DS emulator on PC. However, the final puzzle is upside down on an emulator so the player must change the rotation in the emulator's settings. However, it is probably better for PC gamers to just play Zero Escape: The Nonary Games.

Although not a DS game, another series of games available on the PlayStation Vita often compared to Zero Escape are the Danganronpa series. The first game in this series, Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc, contains a silver trophy called "Nine Coins, Nine Purses, Nine Bears", received for collecting 999 Monocoins. Furthermore, there is an escape room section at one point in Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair that pays homage to the Zero Escape series.

The game's design team is led by Kotaro Uchikoshi, who was also the writer of the acclaimed visual novel Ever 17: The Out of Infinity.

According to Kotaro Uchikoshi, hands were originally going to be a very important part of the story, but the idea was declared unacceptable near the end of the production stage, likely because the bracelets themselves blew up while the REDs and DEADs identified by fingerprints, meaning there would likely be players carrying the dismembered hands/fingers of other players. This apparently forced Uchikoshi to rewrite the entire story.[7]

According to Kotaro Uchikoshi, the characters were based off the nine character archetypes of the Enneagram of Personality, and also compared them to Star Wars characters.

The game Muramusa Rebirth contains a reference to 999. One of its silver trophies is called "Hours, Persons, Doors", which is received when the player performs a 999-hit combo.

The bottom screen of the DS version represents young Akane seeing events through Junpei's eyes. This is revealed when Akane says, "Somehow I found myself in Junpei's mind, 9 years in the future. But I didn't lose myself... I was living in 2 realities at once. One was the present, and the other was the future. Perhaps you can think of it as 2 movies showing on the same screen, at the same time. Eventually, it becomes difficult to separate them, and determine which movie is which. However, if I concentrated, I was able to focus on one or the other."

There is an unused room called the Reactor.

In the True ending, every female player is held hostage. Clover is held at knifepoint by the 9th Man. Akane is held at gunpoint by Aoi. Lotus is held at gunpoint by Ace.

The game has two unlockable previews, one after completing the coffin ending and another after completing the safe ending. Both serve as hints on how to get the safe and true endings.

999 was originally intended to be a one-off game and written without a serious sequel in mind. However, fan demand caused two sequels to be made. When Virtue's Last Reward was released, the series received the name Zero Escape.

Videos

Gallery

Boxart

Nintendo DS version screenshots

Zero Escape: The Nonary Games screenshots

999: The Novel iOS screenshots

Screenshots

Logic puzzles

Artwork


999: Alterna Novel (Vol.1)

999: Alterna Novel (Vol.2)