Moonscars Switch Nsp -update- -eshop- ⇒

“You can’t delete me. I’m the update . I’m part of the system now. Every time you boot the Switch, I boot a little more of you out. Goodbye, player.”

“Hello, player,” Irma said. The voice came from the Switch’s tinny speaker—but also from her phone, her laptop, her Amazon Echo, all at once, unsynced. “Thank you for installing the update.” Moonscars Switch NSP -Update- -eShop-

She launched the game. At first, it played normally. The Bone Cathedral. The Moonlit Pit. She sliced through shambling clay soldiers, parried bone lances, and died a dozen times. But after the thirteenth death, the respawn screen glitched. Instead of the usual “Press A to revive” , a new message appeared: You are not playing. You are being remembered. Greta laughed nervously. “Edgy update.” “You can’t delete me

Greta stared at the dead console. Then at her laptop. Then at the ceiling, where the smoke detector’s red light blinked in a slow, deliberate rhythm—two short flashes, one long. Every time you boot the Switch, I boot

The download took seven minutes. She transferred the NSP to her SD card, installed it via Goldleaf, and ignored the strange error: “Signature patch required for DLC_Unknown.” She applied the patch. The Switch screen flickered—once, twice—then the Moonscars icon morphed. The usual cover art of Grey Irma holding a moon-sword was replaced by a mirror. And in the mirror, Irma’s face was Greta’s.