
Your Lie in April — Heartstrings: Interactive Drama
A story about grief, music, and the courage to feel again. Kousei Arima lost everything when his mother died. Kaori Miyazono taught him it was not too late.
Your Lie in April — The Color Returns
Kousei Arima's mother is dead. He knows this. He watched her waste away, watched the funeral, watched the casket lower into the ground. What he cannot do is feel it. The grief is there — enormous, suffocating — but he has locked it behind walls so thick that nothing gets through. Not joy. Not sadness. Not music. Just gray.
About This Experience
Your Lie in April is not really about romance. It is about grief — the specific, crushing grief of a child who was never allowed to be a child. Kousei's mother loved him, but her love was a weapon. Her demands for perfection, her insistence that he practice until his fingers bled, her belief that pain was the price of greatness — these things did not make him a better pianist. They broke him.
Kaori does not fix him. She cannot. No one can. What she does is stand beside him, playing her violin so passionately that the music grabs him by the collar and demands that he feel something — anything — even if it hurts. And it does hurt. Every note. Every moment. Because feeling again means feeling the grief too, and that grief is the size of the ocean.