I'll just preface this with that I enjoyed the game - the tension of living as an otherised person in hiding is well done, splitting the perspectives through use of UI was used effectively even moment-to-moment part of the narrative, and music/sound also added to this duality with short riffs interspersed at perfect moments.
My critiques mostly pertain to story, or rather, how the core allegory didn't work out well for me.
The game wears the allegory in its sleeve: a classic Werewolf=Queerness. I think this is at its strongest when Oliver is first grappling with the transformation. Starting out as anti-werewolf to then having those past views parroted by people he used to feel close to is something I'm sure many queer people can relate to. He's also told by other werewolves that it's best to keep it on the down low. Be proud of who you are, but only to the degree where it's safe. However, it's starting to fall apart when the choice gets presented. Oliver can either accept his werewolf form (ie embrace his queernes) or... his head explodes or something. It works as a purely werewolf narrative, but considering it reads more as a queer one, I'm not sure what it means in this context. Further on the head explosion or whatever, this makes what happens to his father almost non-sensical. "My homosexuality killed my wife so I rejected it, and now I hate gay people" is the reading I get out of it.
The latter part of the story mostly pertains to the dichotomy between the werewolf/queer community and society outside it at large as a force of oppression. Which is fine, but the narrative beats feel a bit forced. Oliver gets gay frotting sex once, wants to start a revolution which is agreed upon despite it being a REALLY dumb idea as unlike it is for queers, there's a direct call to genocide on all werewolves, and is then blamed by Luis when it unsurprisingly ends up causing a massacre (again, he agreed to it). Following this, there's the (somehow) least concerning portrayal of the Pulse shooting in a furry visual novel game jam entry. It's of course not a direct parallel, this is a White Man Shooter without the motives of misdirected vengeance of the USA's terror wars against the Islamic world, but it certainly seems to be the event being called on here. Although a shocking turn of events, I do think it kinda works better to have a small amount of perpetrators enacting violence - Men With a Gun, religious/political leaders, and police - within the context of queer allegory as opposed to practically every single human/hetcis person wanting them dead and ready to take the shot. Textually, it paints up a hardline Us or Them worldview, where humans clearly hate werewolves, but we also get lines suggesting the hatred goes both ways.
(As a side note, while there is a reading that the allegory stretches further than to queerness, I choose to ignore that as 1) I don't think it's actually supported in the text 2) a racial allegory here would be even messier)
Again, despite those points which look more inflated than they really are as I just had expansive thoughts on it, I enjoyed playing the game and getting the body horror I expect from Rhettoe, but also what I'd describe as social horror - wrapped up in a really cool audiovisual package somehow created in one month!