Without spoiling major twists, the attic contains a journal written by the grandmother in her youth. This journal reframes every interaction the player has had so far. It reveals that the grandmother wasn’t just a passive figure but an active participant in a decades-old pact involving the town’s founding families. The writing here is superb—melancholy, witty, and deeply human. While previous versions focused on characters like the tomboyish handyman Jess or the flirtatious café owner Lena , Part 4 introduces a fully fleshed-out romance option: Eleanor Vance , the town’s quiet, middle-aged archivist.
Best for: Fans of slow-burn mysteries, character-driven romance, and morally ambiguous choices. Avoid if: You dislike visual novels with heavy reading or prefer faster-paced gameplay. Grandmas House Version 0.60 Part 4 is available now on Steam, Itch.io, and the developer’s Patreon. A full walkthrough guide is pinned on the official subreddit. Grandmas House Version 0.60 Part 4
Even minor NPCs, like the gruff postman or the gossiping florist, receive new dialogue trees that reference the attic reveal. The world feels truly reactive. As with any indie update, Version 0.60 Part 4 launched with some technical hiccups. The most common issue reported on Steam and the game’s subreddit is a save-corruption glitch when entering the attic between 2 AM and 3 AM in-game time. The developer has already released a hotfix (0.60.4b) addressing this. Without spoiling major twists, the attic contains a
There’s also a teaser hidden in Part 4’s credits code: an image of a train ticket dated "Fall 2025" with a destination of "Ironwood Sanatorium." Fans speculate this is the setting for the next major location. Grandmas House Version 0.60 Part 4 is arguably the strongest narrative update the game has seen. It transforms what could have been a simple slice-of-life adult VN into a genuine mystery drama with emotional weight. While the adult content is still present (and tastefully integrated), the focus here is on storytelling, consequence, and atmosphere. The writing here is superb—melancholy, witty, and deeply