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Review of Vampire: The Masquerade – Coteries of New York on Nintendo Switch

by Gemma Looksby Gemma Looksby photo Mar 2020
Cover image of Vampire: The Masquerade – Coteries of New York on Switch
Gamefings Score: 7/10
Platform: Switch Switch logo
Released: 24 Mar 2020
Genre: Visual novel
Developer: Draw Distance
Publisher: Draw Distance

Introduction

If you've ever wanted to be moody, stylish, and morally ambiguous while wearing a blazer that probably cost more in upkeep than your last three phone bills, Vampire: The Masquerade - Coteries of New York on Switch is your after-dark ticket. This is a dialogue-first visual novel from Polish studio Draw Distance that drops you into the grim, glittering veins of New York's vampiric underworld. Based on the tabletop classic Vampire: The Masquerade and leaning heavily on the New York by Night sourcebook, Coteries plays like a Choose Your Own Gothic Adventure with fewer vampires staking each other in dramatic slow-motion and more vampires whispering passive-aggressive threats over cocktails. The game arrived on Switch in March 2020 after debuting on PC in late 2019, and the console release brought additional character and environment art plus improved audio design. Coteries is part introduction to the World of Darkness and part morality exam: if you like your drama with heavy dialogue, ethical squirming, and the occasional supernatural power used to avoid paying rent (or murder efficiently), you are in roughly the right alley. It does what it sets out to do - tell a compact, branching vampiric tale - and does it with style more than spectacle.

Gameplay

Coteries of New York is a single-player visual novel where your choices do the heavy lifting. You play one of three fledgling vampires - a passionate Brujah, an artistic Toreador, or a controlling Ventrue - each of which comes with its own attitudes, dialogue flavor, and set of vampiric abilities called disciplines. These disciplines are small-but-satisfying gameplay toys: Brujah get Potence (bonus strength) and Celerity (speed), Toreador get Auspex (super senses) and Celerity, and Ventrue get Fortitude (resilience) and Dominate (mind control). All three can use Presence to charm or frighten mortals. They pop up during conversations, in a few combat moments, and in problem-solving vignettes, so you're not just clicking through text like an ancient Pinterest board. The core of the game is conversation and consequences. Much like the Telltale games that the developers cite as an influence, choices branch the narrative, change how coterie members react to you, and open or close loyalty quests for those coterie candidates you'll recruit. Loyalty quests are where Coteries does most of its emotional work: they let you bond with your crew and (sometimes) make genuinely hard decisions. There's also a balancing act between blood thirst and your remaining humanity, plus the Masquerade - the vampire rule that absolutely zero mortals must know that vampires are a thing. Break it and you'll get a very direct invitation to a court hearing. The game's structure favors storytelling over role-playing mechanics. Draw Distance intentionally stripped out tabletop mechanics like leveling and stat min-maxing to focus on characters and personal drama, which means if you came in craving a feature-rich RPG with inventory screens and dozens of skills to grind, you might feel shortchanged. If you came in for the writing, the atmosphere, and the deliciously slow burn of vampiric politics, Coteries rewards patience. The plot itself has some nice set pieces and sneaky turns: you start with being Embraced and nearly sentenced to death at Prince Panhard's court, get taken under the patronage of Sophie Langley, build a coterie, and eventually become embroiled in a power play that doesn't always end the way you expect. There are a few moments of genuine narrative ambition, including an ending twist that underlines the World of Darkness' favorite theme: no one is as innocent as they think. On Switch the game runs like a tidy portable novel. The interface is straightforward, and the added art and audio improvements on console make scenes feel more alive than the original PC launch did at first. Combat is minimal and treated more like set-piece encounters than full systems, keeping the emphasis squarely on decisions and character interaction. Expect to replay for different outcomes - the branching is meaningful enough that your second or third playthrough will feel new, especially if you pick different clans and pursue different loyalty arcs.

Graphics

Graphically, Coteries wears its visual-novel badge with pride. The game uses 2D character portraits, moody background panels, and occasional cinematic stills to sell the vibe. The artwork added for console versions is noticeable: character expressions get an extra polish, and environments feel slightly richer, which suits Switch's portable screen well. Don't expect full-motion cutscenes or flashy particle effects - this isn't a tech demo; it's a noir comic you can carry in your backpack. Audio-wise the Switch release benefits from improved design that helps sell the city-night atmosphere: rain on fire escape metal, distant sirens, and brooding incidental music by Arkadiusz Reikowski and Brunon Lubas. The soundtrack leans into the melancholic and suspenseful, which is exactly the soundtrack you want while deciding whether to mind-control a bouncer or politely ignore his fragile will. Voice acting is not a major selling point here, and much of the game relies on the writing and art to convey tone, but the sound design additions do a lot to elevate moments that otherwise might read flat on page alone. Performance is stable on Switch. Load times are reasonable, frame hiccups are rare, and the UI is comfortable with Joy-Con navigation. If your ideal vampiric evening includes dramatic lighting and atmosphere rather than jaw-dropping polygon counts, Coteries delivers.

Conclusion

Coteries of New York is not trying to reinvent vampire fiction as interactive art, nor is it pretending to be an open-world RPG where you run a vampire crime syndicate and buy apartments. What it is - and does well - is present a tightly written, nicely acted (on the writing side) visual novel that introduces the World of Darkness to newcomers while giving tabletop veterans an affectionate, lore-rich slice of New York's undead politics. The Switch port is a convenient way to carry the story around, with upgraded art and better audio making the experience more polished than the initial PC launch. The game's commitment to narrative over mechanics will charm players who like Telltale-style moral choices and character drama, but it will frustrate those who expect traditional role-playing systems. Winning the Central & Eastern European Game Awards for best narrative feels about right: the writing is the strong suit. If you enjoy branching stories, vampire politics, and making decisions that leave your conscience smelling faintly of old bourbon, give Coteries a go. It's compact, replayable, and stylish, and its flaws are mostly about what it chooses not to be. Verdict: a solid 7 out of 10 - a vampire romance novel with a rulebook and a penchant for plotting. Also: there's a standalone follow-up, Shadows of New York, if you get withdrawal symptoms after the credits roll.

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