Game-related ramblings.

Month: January 2024

Scratching That Itch: An Anthology Of Cozy RPGs

This is the one hundred seventy-seventh entry in the Scratching That Itch series, wherein I randomly select and write about one of the 1741 games and game-related things included in the itch.io Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality. The Bundle raised $8,149,829.66 split evenly between the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund and Community Bail Fund, but don’t worry if you missed it. There are plenty of ways you can help support the vital cause of racial justice; try here for a start. Lastly, as always, you may click on images to view larger versions.

Our one hundred seventy-seventh random selection from the itch.io Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality has opened its trenchcoat, revealing that it is actually seven games standing on top of each other. It’s An Anthology of Cozy RPGs, by Ludipe (who, I am pleased to realize, is the same developer who made Tie Simulator 2020, a game about learning to tie a necktie that has players hold their keyboards against their chests like a tie), and its tagline in the bundle reads:

Seven tiny unconventional RPGs to enjoy with friends

Tiny and unconventional!? Whatever will they think of next?

Scratching That Itch: Love By The Quarter Mile

This is the one hundred seventy-sixth entry in the Scratching That Itch series, wherein I randomly select and write about one of the 1741 games and game-related things included in the itch.io Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality. The Bundle raised $8,149,829.66 split evenly between the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund and Community Bail Fund, but don’t worry if you missed it. There are plenty of ways you can help support the vital cause of racial justice; try here for a start. Lastly, as always, you may click on images to view larger versions.

Our one hundred seventy-sixth random selection from the itch.io Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality is ready to race… for family. It’s Love by the Quarter Mile, by Dice Monkey Games (credited to Mark Meredith, with special thanks to PK Sullivan), and its tagline in the bundle reads:

A one-page roleplaying game of fast, furious family.

Family is the only thing that could make a person get furious that fast.

Scratching That Itch: Warden: Melody Of The Undergrowth

This is the one hundred seventy-fifth entry in the Scratching That Itch series, wherein I randomly select and write about one of the 1741 games and game-related things included in the itch.io Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality. The Bundle raised $8,149,829.66 split evenly between the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund and Community Bail Fund, but don’t worry if you missed it. There are plenty of ways you can help support the vital cause of racial justice; try here for a start. Lastly, as always, you may click on images to view larger versions.

Our one hundred seventy-fifth random selection from the itch.io Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality is engaging in a bit of 3D action-adventure, like they used to make in the late ’90s. It’s Warden: Melody of the Undergrowth, by Cardboard Keep, and its tagline in the bundle reads:

3rd person action-adventure inspired by genre classics of the N64-era.

That’s right, we’re about to get into some genre classics.

Return Of The Obra Dinn As An Introduction To Games

As always, you may click on images to view larger versions.

There’s not much I can say about Lucas Pope’s 2018 game Return of the Obra Dinn that hasn’t already been said. It’s a fantastic game, tasking players with solving the mystery of the titular ship when it drifts into harbor in 1807, with all 60 crew and passengers unaccounted for. Fortunately, our protagonist possesses a magical pocketwatch that allows them to see (and also, separately, to hear) someone’s moment of death. Examining these frozen moments in time, players must determine what transpired, figure out who else was there, and eventually assign faces to the ship’s roster and deduce what happened to all of them. The game is one big intertwined puzzle, absolutely fascinating to play and striking to look at with its retro-styled, two color dithered art. But you probably already knew all of that already, since Return of the Obra Dinn has received rave reviews everywhere.

But, I plucked it from my backlog under unusual circumstances: I was looking for a game to play together with my partner, who is much less well versed in games than I am. Return of the Obra Dinn turned out to be an excellent choice.

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