Mercury Elopement Syndrome

Mercury Elopement Syndrome

Can my PC run Mercury Elopement Syndrome

Find out whether your PC can run this game by reviewing the minimum and recommended requirements below.

RAM 4 GB+ Storage 1 GB+ Windows XP

Game Details

Languages
English، Japanese، Simplified Chinese، Traditional Chinese
Genre
Indie
Category
Single-player، Steam Achievements، Custom Volume Controls، Mouse Only Option، Playable Without Timed Input، Steam Cloud، Family Sharing
Developer
Renka
Publisher
Renka LH 1
Release Date
2026-03-31

Minimum Requirements

CPU
2.0 Ghz
GPU
512mb Video Memory
RAM
4 GB
Storage
1 GB
OS
Windows XP

Recommended Requirements

CPU
GPU
RAM
Storage
OS

Game Description

Mercury Elopement Syndrome is a short visual novel about a romantic escape.

—Is that too short for a game description?
But honestly, that’s pretty much what it is.

So let me try to squeeze out a few more words to pitch it to you.

That said… is it really a good idea to recommend it so proudly?
As you may have noticed from the screenshots and trailers, it contains some rather “extreme” elements.
It’s definitely not pure or innocent. You could call it a cocktail of vices.

But toxic as it may be, I didn’t lay the darkest parts out in full.
In short, it’s not something I can confidently recommend to everyone. At the very least, it carries a certain kind of “toxicity.”

But is being "toxic" always a bad thing?
A calculated dose of poison can sometimes be beneficial.
Take caffeine or capsaicin, for example—biologically, they’re toxins too.

That said, I don’t really want to compare this game to caffeine or capsaicin.
The reason is simple: caffeine does nothing for me—I can chug it and fall straight asleep.
As for capsaicin, I love spicy food, but my stomach refuses to cooperate. It’s tragic, really.

Instead, I’d rather compare it to—late-night McDonald’s fries.
The reason is just as simple: it’s the middle of the night. I’m sitting in a McDonald’s typing this. There’s a half-eaten bag of fries to my left.

If you think about it—pure carbs, deep-fried in sizzling oil—that’s pretty “extreme” from a health perspective, isn’t it?
But they taste so damn good.

But living, at its core, is consumption.
Even when we’re just breathing quietly, our bodies are oxidizing, aging, inching toward death.

Knowing that, I’d rather choose ways of burning myself out that make me happy—ways that feel meaningful, that give me something back. Even if it’s a little extreme. As long as, on this journey, I can burn fast yet slow—exactly the way I choose.

So, that’s the introduction to this story.
It applies inside the story, and outside of it as well.

I hope you’ll like it.
Just like I like McDonald’s fries.

Wait—come to think of it, do I actually like fries?