The village is curiously empty, and it is revealed to have been cursed by some past event, trapping the village in perpetual night.Īs the Amakura twins investigate, they discover the Camera Obscura and are set upon by the ghosts of the past villagers.
Mio, concerned for her sister, follows Mayu, and the two girls are led to a lost village. The twin sisters, Mio and Mayu Amakura, are visiting a childhood play spot when Mayu, who walks with a limp after a childhood accident, follows a mysterious crimson butterfly deep into the woods. Mio using the Camera Obscura for the first time. 2.2 Deep Crimson Butterfly (Wii Edition) Endings.Despite this, Fatal Frame II is arguably the most known of the Fatal Frame series, due to its engaging story, refined use of the camera and abundant scares. The game resumes the characteristic use of a camera to fend off ghosts, only this time without the claim of being "Based on a true story". The game also had a Director's Cut version released for the Xbox in 2004 and a remake entitled Fatal Frame II: Deep Crimson Butterfly released for the Nintendo Wii in 2012. It was re-released as a "PlayStation 2 Classic" on the PlayStation Network for the PlayStation 3 on in North America. The PlayStation 2 port was developed and published by Tecmo on Novemin Japan and Decemin North America, and was published by Ubisoft on Apin Europe. that we would always be together.įatal Frame II: Crimson Butterfly, known in Japan as Zero ~Akai Chou~ ( Zero ~Crimson Butterfly~) and in Europe as Project Zero II: Crimson Butterfly, is a Japanese survival horror game and the second installment in the Fatal Frame series.