DS Dengeki Bunkou ADV: Baccano!

In February 2008, MediaWorks released an adventure visual novel called Baccano! for the Nintendo DS. The game revolves around the events aboard the transcontinental express Flying Pussyfoot as it travels from Chicago to New York in December 1931. Throughout the story, the player has the power to select characters' next course of action from multiple options. Choosing incorrectly will inevitably lead the player to a 'false' ending.

All endings were written by Ryohgo Narita.

Art and Music
The majority of the background art in the game are stills from the 2007 anime adaptation, and character art derives from the anime's character designs. The music uses tracks from the anime's official soundtrack.

Endings
There are fifty-nine possible endings for the player to reach over the course of the game. Most endings are accompanied by short opinionated commentary from Firo Prochainezo as voiced by Hiroyuki Yoshino, his Japanese voice actor from the 2007 anime adaptation.

Some endings can only be found after the player has completed the Slow/Local Train episode (events from the second light novel) and the Express Train episode (events from the third light novel). Out of the fifty-nine endings, only three in total are 'correct' and reflect the true events that took place.

Ending No. 3: A Delightful Young Man episode
The third ending is one of the three aforementioned True endings and is only accessible to the player once they have completed both the Slow Train and Express Train episodes. It is a sort of bonus chapter, and plays once the player either reads or skips through the credits.

Ending Three is given special mention here because it is important to the Baccano! series and gives the visual novel significance beyond entertainment value. The ending is introduced to the player by Upham as an account of his encounter with the immortal Elmer C. Albatross aboard the train, and the involvement of Lebreau Fermet Viralesque. The player is subsequently treated to a fully voice acted chapter showcasing Turner's interactions with Fermet, Upham's encounters with Elmer and Fermet, and a sequence in which Fermet creeps through the train in search of Czeslaw Meyer.

What makes the bonus chapter/ending significant is that all of it was entirely new, never-before-seen canonical information at the time of the game's release. On one level, it revealed what happened to Turner after he was kicked out of the dining car, and what happened to the Lemure that Jacuzzi Splot and Nice Holystone tied up and interrogated in the second light novel (aka Upham, unnamed at the time. The game is his first named appearance). On another level, it reveals that Elmer and Fermet were aboard the Flying Pussyfoot, which hadn't been alluded to in any capacity in the novels already published.

The contents in Ending Three would finally be confirmed almost a year later with the publication of the fourteenth light novel in January 2009. In Another Junk Railroad, Upham (finally named) recounts his encounters with Elmer and Fermet to a false reporter.