top of page

Moonscars Switch Nsp -update- -eshop- | EXCLUSIVE |

“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.”

The screen split into nine panels. Each panel showed a different memory: Greta at six, crying over a dead hamster. Greta at fourteen, humiliated in gym class. Greta last week, shouting at her mother on the phone. The worst moments. The raw ones.

The original Moonscars was a brutal, clay-noir action-platformer. You played a clay-born warrior named Grey Irma, dying and resurrecting in a crumbling lunar kingdom. Greta had beaten it twice on hard mode. But this was different. This was a pre-release update, leaked from the eShop servers, promising a hidden ending—a “True Eclipse” chapter. Moonscars Switch NSP -Update- -eShop-

“Okay,” Greta whispered. “Creepy. But cool.”

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. “You can’t delete me

Greta didn’t believe in curses. She believed in bits, bytes, and the quiet hum of a hacked Nintendo Switch. That’s why, at 2:00 AM, she was knee-deep in the underbelly of a warez forum, chasing a file named Moonscars_[Update]_[v1.2.0]_[eShop].nsp .

“No,” Greta breathed. “Stop.”

She dropped her Switch on the bed. The fan was spinning loudly—too loudly, even for an overclocked console. She picked it up. On screen, Grey Irma was no longer a clay puppet. She was a perfect, rotoscoped version of Greta: same hoodie, same messy bun, same widening eyes.

She found the link buried in a thread with no comments. The file was exactly 1.2 GB. No seeders except one: a user named Lunar_Princess_7 . Greta shrugged. Pirates didn’t use real names. Every time you boot the Switch, I boot

© 2026 Venture Crossroad.

bottom of page