I’m about 80% of the way through it and it’s been not just a welcome distraction from a stressful couple of weeks, but one of my favourite things I’ve played in a long time.
Pretty chill, but still with some challenge on higher difficulties. Wonderful art style and satisfying fold-in on themselves level design. The writing is good and succinct with what could be just another cozy game unfolding into something more varied in tone and having genuine things to say about regional identity, tourism, and commerce at the expense of locals.
What really (pleasantly) surprised me was what a love letter it was to all sorts of great past video games. Sometimes via a specific mechanic, sometimes a themed level or ability. Persona, Mario Galaxy, Zelda, Ico, SSX Tricky, Fez, classic RPGs, you name it.
Anyway, I think it’s pretty neat.
I don’t especially get what kind of game it is from its trailer. I glossed over it because of this when I saw it on Steam.
It looks kinda open world hack and slash-y? Which are two genres I mostly hate. But also, it has some mention of puzzles, which I do like. But its hard for me to tell “what is the thing you spend most of your time doing” while looking at its press material.
It works on a daily rotation a bit like a Persona-lite.
So in the morning you choose one of four different areas with a unique biome and different spells/abilities specific to them to go to for that day. They’re small, dense open world areas with some hidden loot chests, NPCs to chat to mostly for worldbuilding but occassionally giving you story questions (that you usually resolve by just continuing to play over time), and occassional batches of enemies. They also contain portals to dungeons of different difficulties (clearly marked like ski slopes would be at a Ski Resort, which is kind of a theme of the game about dungeon crawling as tourism). They’re not sprawling and even then certain areas leading to the higher level dungeons are blocked off at first until you progress. Just enough to explore a little bit and test out your (usually pretty cool) abilities that are specific to that biome.
(There are also spots in these areas where you can choose not to do a dungeon and just relax and admire the veiws for an afternoon for a boost to stats etc. It encourages you to sort of roleplay the vibe of being on holiday in that way, but it can also be useful if you’re struggling as doing this gives bonuses like growing your health bar permanently etc).
Then you pick a dungeon in that world to tackle. You can only do one a day. These a tight, often smartly overlapping, self-contained levels that are always a mixture of fighting groups of monsters and approachable (but not braindead) puzzles, sometimes with a bit of light platforming. They range from being puzzle heavy to enemy heavy, but they’re all a mixture. Some of them are pretty direct homages to classic games too, so they might change perspective to evoque those games and make them easier or cooler to navigate. For example:
spoiler
There’s a Mario Galaxy one of small spherical worlds with their own gravity that you also snowboard grind rails between. Or a Fez style one where you use levers to rotate whole bits of the level. One with minecart racing etc.
The combat is pretty standard hack and slash - heavy or light attacks, short four hit combos etc - with a dodge roll based on stamina. I’m not great at that stuff but it’s not punishing unless you play on the highest difficulty and things like stamina for dodges refill very quickly. It’s made more engaging by your spells/abilities for that region though which are always one close, one ranged, but vary from being purely offensive to movement based. Then you also have things called conduit attacks that recharge (and you can find more of and swap in and out as you please) that are things like big AOE attacks, things that strip sheilds from bigger enemies and stagger the others etc. If it sounds like a lot at once it doesn’t feel that way, because everything in the game is introduced gradually and unfolds in a really friendly and managable way. There’s no anytime saving in dungeons like there is in the rest of the game, but they usually have a couple of well placed checkpoints and the dungeons themselves aren’t long.
Once you’ve finished a puzzle you go back to the resort town for the evening. There you can sell, buy, or upgrade gear or just wander round to talk to NPCs and occassionally stumble on small character quests. The main thing you do each evening is decide how you’re going to spend it - picking one of the 15 or so story characters to ‘hang out’ with or do an activity. Different characters improve different stats you have and befriending people unlocks abilities and rewards specificly from them. Pretty much everything is useful though so you don’t have to feel like you’re making tough choices or trying to max stats. I just went for whatever vibe I was feeling unless there was a specific thing I wanted. Sometimes I wanted to unlock upgrades for my weapons, sometimes just to chill with a dog. Very occassionally there’s some sort of story beat where you don’t get a choice of what to do with your evening, ranging from dramatic plot points to village events (a bit like the festivals in Stardew Valley or similar).
Then you go back to your hotel room at night and can either go to bed to start the next day with full health, or stay up reading or watching TV to advance your stats but take a hit to your overall health the next day as you’re ‘tired’.
And the days cycle through like that. There doesn’t seem to be a limit on how many days in which you have to complete all the dungeons either so you can try and beat one every day or take it slower and see more of the character stuff by resting some days just to get to the evening.
Thanks for this write up. I wasnt interested from the trailer but now I want to check it out
Happy to. All the elements are quite light, but it’s very approachable as a result and feels a bit lime more than the sum of it’s parts for me.
Thank you for the answer! That makes it a lot more clear what’s going on; the impression I got from the marketing material was kind of all over the place and made it seem a “do everything” mess.
Probably not the game for me? Sounds like I might like 2/5s of the core gameplay, but also probably will mildly to strongly dislike another 2/5s. I like puzzles and platforming, but I find hack and slash combat extremely boring. I do like that there’s no ‘timed social links’ like in Personal; one of like 3 major reasons why I don’t like those games.
No problems. It’s the sort of game I’d say to people they might as well try because it’s chill and pretty and very approachable if they were gonna pirate something or had Games Pass etc. But you were going to spend money then yeah, it sounds like the balance of what you like and don’t might not be quite right for you.
Is it like Evoland which is very much a potpourri, or does it only make nods to those games?
I haven’t played Evoland, but I’d say the core is a natural feeling blend of things like hack and slash dungeon crawling, magic spells, Persona style day cycles and friendship activity choices etc. All with a pretty light touch as the whole vibe is very approachable. Then specific dungeons have designs or ways to use your abilities that are varying degrees of direct homage, often with a shift of perspective to one like those games. I listed a few examples under a spoiler tag in another comment.
This looks real cool actually. I will wishlist it for sure.
Thinking about it’s claim that there really aren’t a lot of modern Zelda like games on PC this rings true to me.
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It’s really good! If anyone just needs a one-sentence summary: It’s Ocarina-of-Time Zelda in a Persona format.
- Like OoT, the hack-and-slash combat is secondary to using the shiny new tools you just got to play around with new puzzles and concepts.
- The vibes are Very Good: unique, chill setting, fun side characters, lots of relaxing and introspection.
- It explicitly discourages the Persona “max all socials” mindset: if you like a character, just hang out with them! The perks are all good, and even on Tough Mode, the game is very forgiving.
- You can really tell which games are the developers’ favorites, and they clearly have good taste. I love all the gameplay curveballs its thrown so far.
- It’s an interesting exploration of the experience and inherent tension of Being A Tourist.
- Unless there’s a crazy twist halfway through, it’s just fine for kids to watch.
I’m very much enjoying it. It feels like the kind of game that miraculously turned out just like what its creators envisioned.
This I’d a very good (and more succinct) write up than mine. I’m almost at the very end now (two dungeons left) and it stays kid friendly. The stakes get a bit higher but if it had one of those movie classification warnings it would be ‘moderate peril, mild threat’.