The Censor -demo 2.0.6- By Tiramisu Big Ass Studio -

The demo features a calendar system where each day is split into four time slots (Morning, Afternoon, Night, Midnight). You must balance your actual job to earn money and rise through ranks (from Intern to Manager) while exploring the apartment area to interact with NPCs.

Demo 2.0.6 The Censor (also known as The Censor DX Edition Tiramisu Big Studio (often published under the label Mango Party

The demo is restricted to the Apartment area , which is just one of several planned locations. The Censor -Demo 2.0.6- By Tiramisu Big Ass Studio

The demo introduces a mysterious contact who begins sending "unfiltered" messages through the secure line, forcing you to decide whether to report the subversion or become a part of the resistance. The atmosphere is heavy with neon-noir aesthetics and a constant sense of surveillance, emphasizing that in this city, even the person holding the red pen isn't safe from the ink.

While the full version—available as The Censor DX Edition on Steam —features multiple zones and heroines, Demo 2.0.6 is specifically polished to showcase the Apartment area and the storyline of the first main character, Misa. The demo features a calendar system where each

The game includes officially licensed cameos and crossovers from other popular titles in the genre, such as characters from NTRaholic .

If you're looking for more details or want to support the developers, you can find their updates on the Big Ass Studio Patreon . Demo of Censor 2.0.6 - Patreon The demo introduces a mysterious contact who begins

This setup allows the developer to utilize the "found footage" horror trope in an interactive way. The horror does not come from jump scares lurking around corners (though there are tension-building elements); it comes from the slow, creeping realization of what you are looking at. The gameplay loop is deceptively mundane—click, drag, censor—until the content on the screen begins to warp, glitch, and fight back. It taps into a very modern fear: the loss of autonomy to algorithmic oversight and the terrifying nature of witnessing something you were never meant to see.