P.I.S. File Switch NSP [Update] (eShop)

About This Game

P.I.S. File is a short point-and-click puzzle game with no dialogue or text. The story is told through visuals, making it easy for players of any language to enjoy.

After humans disappear from Earth, robots continue to run the Earth Post Office. A postwoman from the Heaven Post Office loses her letters and must collect them while avoiding the robots.

Solve clever puzzles, explore hand-drawn locations, and uncover the story through visual clues. The game features original music, pencil-style artwork, and can be completed in about 30 minutes. Kiko’s Apple Adventure Switch NSP

Your choices lead to one of three endings—Good, Normal, or Bad—making P.I.S. File worth playing more than once.

P.I.S. File
P.I.S. File
P.I.S. File

Game Information

  • Title ID: P.I.S. File
  • Release Date: June 18, 2026
  • Genre: Adventure
  • Publisher: STEAM STREET
  • Developer: STEAM STREET
  • Region: [Europe, USA, JPN, Asia]
  • Languages: English, Japanese, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Korean, Chinese
  • Platform: Nintendo Switch
  • Required Firmware: Base – v22.1.0
  • Rom Type: .NSP

FAQ P.I.S. File

Q1: What do people use Raspberry Pis for?
Raspberry Pis are commonly used for learning programming, building small servers, home automation, media centers, retro gaming consoles, and IoT projects.

Q2: Can multiple Raspberry Pis work together?
Yes, multiple Pis can be connected in a cluster to perform distributed computing tasks, testing environments, or lightweight server setups.

Q3: How can files be automatically transferred between Pis?
Files can be shared or transferred using tools like SSH, SCP, Rsync, or network sharing protocols like Samba and NFS for automatic syncing.

Q4: What are some things people don’t know Raspberry Pis can do?
They can run AI models, control smart home devices, act as network monitors, host websites, or even work as small cloud servers.

Q5: What is confusion about .pif files?
“.pif” files are unrelated to Raspberry Pi systems. They are old Windows shortcut or program information files and are often confused with Pi-related terminology.

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