Shin Chan: Shiro And The Coal Town Official

This is a game about —of summer heat shimmering over asphalt, of the smell of soot and frying tempura, of a dog’s wet nose nudging your hand. It understands that childhood isn’t about epic battles, but about the small, miraculous discoveries: a new fishing spot, a secret passage behind a shed, or a coal town that only you and your dog can find.

Released in 2024 for Nintendo Switch and PC (via Steam), the game was localized for Western audiences in late 2024 and early 2025. Here’s everything you need to know about this charming sequel. The story begins with the familiar, chaotic Nohara family—Shinnosuke, his father Hiroshi, mother Misae, baby Himawari, and the ever-loyal dog Shiro—traveling to Akita Prefecture to visit Misae’s childhood friend, Yuri. What starts as a simple countryside vacation soon takes a strange turn. shin chan: shiro and the coal town

For anyone who has ever wished they could step into a Ghibli film, or revisit a summer that never ended, Shiro and the Coal Town is a ticket you won’t want to punch. This is a game about —of summer heat

Perfect for: Nostalgists, Shin-chan fans, and anyone who believes that a dog is the best adventure partner. Here’s everything you need to know about this

In the ever-expanding world of video game adaptations, few franchises have managed to capture the gentle, whimsical spirit of their source material quite like the recent Crayon Shin-chan games. Following the surprise success of Shin chan: Me and the Professor on Summer Vacation – The Endless Seven-Day Journey , developer h.a.n.d. and publisher Neos have returned with a spiritual successor that trades some of that game’s rural mysticism for industrial curiosity. Shin chan: Shiro and the Coal Town (クレヨンしんちゃん「シロと炭の町」) arrives as a heartfelt slice-of-life adventure that balances the innocence of childhood with the bittersweet ache of a changing world.

One morning, while chasing the mischievous Shiro, Shin-chan stumbles upon a mysterious, soot-stained train station hidden behind a waterfall. Boarding the train, he finds himself transported to (Sumi no Machi), a bustling industrial-era village trapped in a perpetual twilight of smoke, steel, and nostalgia. Here, the air smells of coal dust, the river glows with phosphorescence, and time seems to have stopped somewhere between the Showa period and a steampunk fairy tale.