System of Souls, only if you have a soul do you have a wish.
Think about it, what does wishlist mean?
Wishlist, right?
Let's go a little further: what wishes can a pot have?
Few. Why?
Because it has no soul. Good. Well, here we come to talk about a game in which you are going to have to find your soul. The first way to prove that you have a soul is that you have wishes.
And since you have wishes, you should add System of Souls to the wishlist that just opened today, both on PlayStation Store (for PS4 and PS5) and [l27Steam].
If you haven't lost your way in this very philosophical reasoning, then you have a System of Souls-proof intelligence. The new sci-fi puzzle-solving video game, developed by Chaotic Lab, will be available in physical version for PS4 and PS5 and digitally on PS5 and Steam on May 19.
The ecological catastrophe of the year 2155 is becoming incompatible with life. That's why the company ION is making a fortune as the only one capable of transferring the souls of citizens to synthetic bodies: the androids L-064N. But it turns out that not all these transfers go well. At least, yours, oh calamity, has not gone well: because you do not remember who you are or what you are doing in this stainless steel world.
And that's where all your problems come from. You will have to unveil all your past, hidden in the ION facilities, and so you will have a future. Aurea will be your only companion, an artificial intelligence that needs to activate your neural network with mental challenges to make you remember. If you keep up with her, you will manage to reach the Atkinson-Schiffrin tower, the storehouse of human souls.

Systems of Souls proposes a first-person game mechanics, whose puzzles are solved with only one hand and all your neurons, interacting with the objects that you will find.
The game is divided into four parts, the four floors of the ION facility, adding different elements to the gameplay and increasing the difficulty. All with the promise of recovering your original body in the Atkinson-Schiffrin tower.
Do you notice that little warmth that starts at the crown of your head and extends to the tips of your toes? It's the desire to own this game, which can be interpreted as the presence of soul. In other words, if after what you've read you don't feel like adding System of Souls to your wishlist, I'd be worried: if you don't feel any desire, maybe you don't have a soul.