Showing posts with label indie games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indie games. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2016

The Cat Lady (thoughts on the game)



Recently, my husband and I settled into a holiday appropriate game, purchased during the Halloween Steam sale for a mere pittance.  "The Cat Lady" is a point and click adventure game, which uses what appears to be pixellated photographs as the main characters, and a background made of digital mixed media consisting of edited photographs, disassembled, reassembled and edited for maximum mood and texture.  It's sort of an artsy mix that I find very basic, but very appealing at the same time.  It's like a moving collage, made by Sorrow personified, in a dread induced state.  So basically, it's awesome, and anyone sharing my taste would love it!

The game begins with our "heroine", Susan Ashworth, staring into her Cat's eyes as she patiently waits for the pills she swallowed to poison her body and bring her to a peaceful death.  This may sound like a glorification of suicide, but I don't see it that way, and I'm not one to romanticize death.  Susan, our heroine, is a truthful portrayal of tragedy as she suffers from a slothful, deep depression resulting from isolation and loss.  It's probably the most refreshingly accurate representation of mental illness and depression I've seen in popular media, so accurate that I have to wonder if the writer drew from personal experience.  

When she fades from our world and crosses over into a world between, she is denied death by what appears to be an old lady, who we surmise to be the Devil or Death.  Susan is then blackmailed into returning back to body (and her empty life) in order to rid the earth of five parasites before she can find her peace.  And so the journey begins!

one of the five parasites

The game is very heavy on story and dialogue, and like most point-and-click adventure games, it relies on problem solving to move the game forward.  You must interact with the environment and other characters around you and pay attention to clues in the surroundings and in dialogue in order to reach your goals.  I find this game method much more pleasing than the ever popular first person shooter games, where the object is usually "shoot so and so" hidden behind a shoddily written story and forced unvarying dialogue (yawn).

The dreaded criticism...
The Cat Lady is an indie game, so it will have an indie feel to it, especially where the graphics and voice acting are concerned.  The graphics are not 3D or computer animated, but instead take on a more cut and paste approach, like an avant garde South Park.  Personally I prefer this, because when a game is too realistic, I often find it too nerve-racking to finish (ahem, Outlast).  The voice acting is not top notch quality, ranging from fantastic for the two main characters, to downright silly for some of the lesser roles.  The Devil or Death happens to be my least favorite, as the actress botched it with something that sounds like a forced fake German accent, which spontaneously changes to an accent that sounds like the voodoo queen from Monkey Island (if you get this reference, then congrats, you're a geek).  Her intonation was good, but I found the accent to be really forced, and downright distracting.  Another thing about the audio that really bothered me, was that the voice actors that played the supporting roles were all obviously using very cheap microphones without any sort of pop filter or volume control.  My husband didn't seem to notice this, but I've owned enough microphones to know that it didn't sound professional.  But, remember, this is an indie game, which means their budget was probably very limited.  All in all, I think they did a great job telling a story and realizing their dream with the funds they had.  It was a very satisfying, exciting game with plenty of story, atmosphere, and suspense, and I strongly recommend it!



You can buy the game DRM free direct from them, or from GOG:
Or, if you already have a Steam account, and don't mind DRM, you can buy it here:
http://store.steampowered.com/app/253110

get ready to kick some ass

Friday, June 8, 2012

Interactive Art (The Dream Machine)


Wow.  Just wow.  I love artsy point and click games that encorporate music, story, dialogue and visual art to create an entire atmosphere.  Luckily for me, these games seem to be getting more popular  (Machinarium, the Dream Machine, Botanicula, Stacking, and although it is more of an adventure game, Limbo).  The Dream Machine, made by two "Swedish Nerds", has a unique twist to it: sculpture and stop-action style figurines.

Ever since I watched Gumbi as a child, I have been in love with this art form.  There is something palpable about three dimensional art that makes me feel like I am falling into a different world entirely; it draws me in, it claims my attention and mind.  So, naturally, when I saw The Dream Machine available on Steam, I felt drawn to it and purchased it immediately.  All I had to see was clay figurines and I was opening my pocketbook.

When I actually played it, I was even more impressed than I thought I would be. All parts of the game are constructed by hand out of clay, cardboard and paint.  The scenery is so incredibly detailed, that it feels like walking into an alternate universe where everything is made of clay.  Each scene and character has been painstakingly created to perfection.

The story is something outlandishly fantastic on its own.  Your character (Victor) starts his day out in a perfectly normal fashion, living his normal life with his normal pregnant wife after just moving into a new apartment that seems normal.  If you've seen Rosemary's Baby, then you know where I'm going with this.  In the building lurks a great mystery which you will uncover, and a great evil which you will have to defeat.  Victor goes from his normal life to a discovery which leads him through the dreams of others, solving puzzles and problems in order to get to the center of each dream, the lair of great evil that holds dreamers captive.

If you would like to try the game out, you can play it for free online, but I would strongly suggest purchasing it (on steam or at their website) because it is much better quality.  Also, of course, by purchasing it you would be supporting this wonderful art form.

You can try the game out here:
http://www.thedreammachine.se/

Happy gaming!