(as a companion piece) Recommended for: Fans of psychological horror, found-footage aesthetics, and anyone who thinks Corpse Party is only about gore.
The story is simple: The group is tasked with cleaning out the old, disused music room. As they work, they discover a set of vintage audio reels. After playing one, strange things begin to occur. A paper mannequin appears in the window. A hidden room is discovered behind a wall. One by one, the students vanish from the video frame, leaving only static. What makes Missing Footage brilliant is its rejection of franchise expectations. Fans expecting Another Child or Tortured Souls —with their intestines, spirit photography, and Sachiko’s cackling—are instead given 15 minutes of dusting shelves and complaining about homework. Corpse Party- Missing Footage
In the sprawling, gut-wrenching universe of Corpse Party , death is rarely quick and never clean. The franchise, which began as a PC-98 RPG Maker game, has built its legacy on a foundation of visceral dread, graphic violence, and psychological torment. However, before the 2013 OVA Corpse Party: Tortured Souls threw viewers into the blood-soaked, reality-warping halls of Tenjin Elementary School, studio Asread released a shorter, quieter, and arguably more disturbing prologue: Corpse Party: Missing Footage . (as a companion piece) Recommended for: Fans of