And then Bonto’s finger, by reflex, pressed the rewind button.
Sine Mora EX : The Definitive Dieselpunk Shmup on Nintendo Switch
Outside the window, the Strafgericht ’s shadow passed over the sun. sine mora nsp
The fight lasted four seconds. Koldy was faster. One plasma blade sheared through Bonto’s cockpit, through his ribcage, through the NSP core. The chronometer shattered.
The first wave of Dynasty interceptors came like locusts. Their cannons spat molten tungsten. Bonto’s left engine took a hit—flames, alarms, the sickening lurch of gravity. He closed his eyes. And then Bonto’s finger, by reflex, pressed the
The Bernhard Dynasty didn’t kill with bullets. They killed with chrono-dilation . They froze his son in a bubble of subjective time—forever falling, forever screaming silently, a single second stretched across eternity. A punishment for Bonto’s rebellion. A lesson: You cannot fight what you cannot catch.
He had been late. Three minutes late because the water pumps in the Lower Tiers had failed, and a man had to choose: save his son’s flower or save his son’s life. Koldy was faster
“Aka,” he gasped. “I’m losing the memory. What was his name?”
is a critically acclaimed 2.5D side-scrolling shoot 'em up (shmup) that first debuted in 2012 and later arrived on the Nintendo Switch as an enhanced "EX" edition. In the context of the Switch, the keyword " sine mora nsp " refers to the Nintendo Submission Package (NSP) file format used to store and install the game on the console.