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The Ultimate Guide to Indie Games

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I know, I know — you’ve got games like Super Mario Odyssey, Assassin’s Creed: Origins, and Call of Duty: World War II on your to-play list. Or maybe you’re deep into Blizzard Entertainment’s team shooter Overwatch and you’re working on getting to platinum with the new healer Moira. But this year gave us a raft of outstanding indie games. Here are just a few that you should consider gifting
I know, I know — you’ve got games like Super Mario Odyssey, Assassin’s Creed: Origins, and Call of Duty: World War II on your to-play list. Or maybe you’re deep into Blizzard Entertainment’s team shooter Overwatch and you’re working on getting to platinum with the new healer Moira. But this year gave us a raft of outstanding indie games. Here are just a few that you should consider gifting a friend or giving a try yourself.
Platforms: PC, Mac, PS4 Price: $16 Where to buy: Steam
Infinite Fall’s Scott Benson describes Night in the Woods as “rust belt gothic.” That term encapsulates everything that makes this game a gem. It’s full of personality and heart. Its quirky characters are lovable but flawed and can’t seem to escape their dark pasts. They live in a small town that’s awash in radiant golden light, punctuated with bright colors, and dying as jobs start disappearing.
After protagonist Mae returns home from dropping out of college, she finds herself alienated from old friends — and she also finds a dismembered arm outside of the local diner. Much of the game is heavily narrative-driven so there’s quite a bit of text. But there are also rhythm games, like when Mae goes to band practice. You can play Demontower, a dungeon crawler on Mae’s computer, “do crimes” with her friend Gregg, or find constellations in the sky.
I first played the game in January, and the soundtrack still haunts me — its plucky upbeat tracks and the echoey songs from Mae’s nightmares, which sometimes sound like carnival music filled with foreboding. A new director’s cut edition will debut on December 13, but Night in the Woods is the kind of game you can play more than once to discover all the secrets and stories hidden within.
Platforms: PC, Xbox One, PlayStation 4 Price: $10-$25 Where to buy: Steam, Xbox Live, PlayStation Store
Little Nightmares is an atmospheric puzzle-platformer that reminds me of a twisted version of Studio Ghibli’s Spirited Away… or an even more twisted version of Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s Delicatessen. It’s stylishly creepy, awash in a muted color palette as you hide from silent, sinister ghouls with long grasping arms or wearing masks made of skin.
You play as Six, a small girl seeking to escape her underwater prison. Tarsier has also released two of three DLC packs that enable you to explore the world from another character’s perspective.
Platforms: PC Price: $4 Where to buy: Steam
Members of the No Code team have worked on acclaimed games such as Creative Assembly’s science-fiction horror title Alien: Isolation, and it shows. Stories Untold is four vignettes, all of which somehow incorporate the interface from old text adventures like Infocom’s Zork. It’s rich with atmosphere and intrigue, folding in a sense of nostalgia and retro aesthetic that will appeal to fans of Netflix’s Stranger Things. Though it’s not straight-up horror, it does have some creepy elements that will prickle and prod you with uneasiness.
The first episode, The House Abandon, is a remastered version of a project that emerged from a game jam. It sets the tone well, flipping your expectations that this will be like any other text adventure you’ve played.
Platforms: iOS devices Price: $3 Where to buy: Apple App Store
Vignettes is a virtual toy that plays with perspective. Its bright sherbet colors are soothing, and it’s terrific fun spinning and manipulating objects in midair. The basic premise is that each object, when viewed from a different point of view, can turn into another object. One side of a TV, for instance, could become the flat bottom of a telephone.
It’s pleasingly tactile, and solving the perspective puzzles and discovering new objects is delightful. If you interact with the objects, you’re also sometimes rewarded with quirky animations and charming sound effects.
Platforms: PC, Mac, Linux Price: $10 Where to buy: Steam
West of Loathing gives a whole different meaning to “spaghetti Western.” It’s a puntastic RPG from Asymmetric Publications, a studio best known for the long-running web RPG Kingdom of Loathing. To give you a sense of its humor, your character can choose from the following classes: Beanslinger, Snake Oiler, and Cowpuncher. You can sink points into stats like Moxie and Gumption. Every time you stumble upon a spittoon, you can choose to rummage around in it — all while the game chastises you for your poor sense of personal hygiene.
Though the game opts for Kingdom of Loathing’s trademark stick figure aesthetic, its characters and environments are evocative and simply fun to look at. It has tons of secrets to explore and every other item or character you find has a clever thing to say.
Platforms: PC, Mac Price: Name your own price Where to buy: Itch.io
Everything Is Going to Be OK isn’t a traditional game. Developer Nathalie Lawhead refers to it more as an “interactive zine.” When she talks about expanding on it, she refers to it as adding the “missing pages.” It’s the kind of game that wants to have a dialogue with you and is more of an experience rather than a collection of mechanics.
It’s also an intensely personal game. Lawhead created it to share and talk about some of her own struggles, and it addresses topics like social rejection and low self-esteem. But it’s also funny and poignant, and its bizarre little creatures are endearing to behold. At its core, it’s an optimistic game that’s an unflinching exploration of uncomfortable topics with bold humor.
Platforms: PC, Mac, PS4, Nintendo Switch (in the future) Price: $6-$13 Where to buy: Steam, PlayStation Store
Detention features ghosts and monsters from Taiwanese folklore. But the real horror is that it’s based on a real time period of oppression in the 1960s where the government brutally suppressed people simply for disagreeing with it.
You alternate between playing as two students, Wei and Ray. You spend most of your time in what appears to be a haunted school, solving puzzles and attempting to unravel the grisly truth behind what really happened there. It’s a tense, atmospheric experience that’s deeply unsettling because you know that parts of it are true.
Platforms: PC, Mac, Xbox One, PS4 Price: $14-$20 Where to buy: Steam, Xbox Live, PlayStation Store
What Remains of Edith Finch is a slow-burning cinematic experience about a cursed family and its many tragedies. As you explore the Finch home, a house that looms over you and appears larger than life, you play as each of the family members right before they meet their unfortunate ends. Each story is vastly different — in one, you morph into a variety of animals; in another, you simultaneously control two characters, one in a daydream and another in real life — and it’s a pleasant surprise to discover what each experience has in store.

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