Tag Archives: Featured

A Space for the Unbound

Publisher: Toge
Developer: Mojiken
Year: 2023
Platform: Windows, XBox One, XBox Series, PS4, PS5, Switch

Rating: 7

“I’m not ashamed of my story”

A Tale of Two Cities is a wonderfully dark, albeit uplifting story that I would recommend to anyone. Yet I never would have finished it had Ms. Kubella not tethered my doing so to passing the 9th grade. As a teenager who grew up on Dean Koontz thrillers, I did not have the patience at first to trudge through the hours of character development leading up to the riveting and inspiring final act. I felt quite similarly after starting Mojiken’s narrative adventure A Space for the Unbound, a tale that also embraces themes of duality and transformation. The first several hours are indeed the worst of times, and I probably would have quit had I not been reviewing the game. But as with Dickens, I am delighted that I persevered to be rewarded with one of the most emotionally stirring games I have ever experienced.

You play as Atma, a high school boy in late-90s rural Indonesia who has a very close friend named Raya.  They’re both a bit ambivalent about graduating but together they map out a bucket list (a term that didn’t exist in the 90s, but I digress) of things they want to do before the responsibilities of adulthood take over. While starting out on their adventure, Atma discovers a red book that allows him the ability to “space dive” into a person’s subconscious to help them face past trauma and make life-affirming decisions. Atma’s motivated to take these space dives because the parties involved are unwittingly blocking his attempts at completing the bucket list. He soon discovers, however, that Raya has a similar but more destructive superpower that can alter reality itself.

Gameplay is fairly standard as you walk around town, interact with townsfolk, pick up objects (including all those rare bottle caps from your bucket list), and name and pet every adorable kitty in town. The side-scrolling, story-driven adventure supports both gamepad and keyboard and both are pretty seamless. There are plenty of arcade-like mini-games that I found to be a bit easier on the gamepad, though your mileage may vary. Most conversations involve exhausting available topics and there’s never a way to fail a conversation. Most characters (including the cats!) have a lot of feelings about Atma, represented by emoji clouds over their heads.

a space for the unbound review pic

The first third of game is an exercise in pointless tedium, unfortunately, as every attempt to work on the bucket list either requires Atma to go on painstaking fetch quests or play the aforementioned mini-games. The games range from sneaking around authority figures, throwing objects to distract animals, to even a literal Mortal Kombat-style arcade game. They’re fairly mundane, rather easy (especially at the beginning), and are often little more than a diversion. Three hours in and I had briefly met a couple dozen characters and walked around town a few times, all without any motivation to do so outside of this bucket list that I didn’t care about (especially since Raya too seemed to stop caring about it almost immediately).

The plot finally picks up when Atma starts space-diving those closest to Raya, which puts the two protagonists and their respective superpowers at odds. To say more would be a spoiler about the nature of the conflict, but it winds up causing chaos to reign and jeopardizing the fabric of space-time. Atma’s powers suddenly matter, and the bucket list takes a backseat to his frantic race to save the world and Raya with it. Even some of the cats get into it, with one of them developing quite the attitude and filthy mouth to match it.

At the same time, the puzzles become exponentially more interesting, especially after Atma acquires the ability to time travel, giving him the gift (or curse?) of being able to space-dive people’s subconciouses within other people’s subconsciouses across multiple timelines just to make one tiny fix to the present. The Inception-level logic at play I found to be devilishly satisfying. Courtroom scenes reminiscent of Phoenix Wright populate the subconscious of several characters, with Atma needing to find evidence and object to inconsistent testimony. One of my favorite puzzles involves an organic and clever use of algebra. It’s not especially difficult, though admittedly it could stop the game cold for those without the requisite math skills, especially since there’s no hint system of any kind.

While space-diving takes Atma to a trippy dream-like world, you’ll spend a lot of time bustling about town. You’ll run into a guy with a stand who’s there to fix people’s tires, and you’ll come across a food cart selling Es Legen, a local drink that comes from the tap water of palm trees. A stranger will try to turn you on to keroncong music, and you’ll find yourself immersed in the town-wide Lintang Festival.  The atmosphere solidly captures its distinctive time and locale throughout, introducing players to Indonesian music, cuisine, rituals, and hordes of stray cats (and other animals). The anime-inspired pixel art graphics are consistently gorgeous, with a wide color palette and excellent use of shadows and perspective. The cutscenes are also used to great effect, with meticulously drawn close-ups that offer a sharp contrast from the otherwise gamified atmosphere to elicit pathos when it’s needed most.

The original soundtrack by Masdito “ittou” Bachtiar and Christabel Annora sports a whopping 72 numbers, and seemingly each one sets the mood for its own scene and character. There are also vocal tracks that perfectly capture the game’s themes of duality and loss, and I would gladly listen to every one of these again. My only critique is that the music rarely shuts off, as if the game doesn’t trust the player to stay engaged with the world’s natural ambience. Additionally, the clickety-clack of a typewriter unnecessarily accompanies every line of dialogue and detracts from the conversations.

It will take the average player around ten hours to see the main story. It’s hard to say if that’s too long, as in hindsight I discovered that nearly every dull moment I encountered at the beginning had purpose, culminating in a profoundly moving endgame that had me welled up in tears. I even found myself wishing to explore the world further to complete the bucket list items I missed, but several would have required another full playthrough to get them all. Then again, perhaps that’s a good thing, as I was able to spend more time basking in the afterglow of a gaming experience that ended up being very much the best of times.

For those with enough patience to see it through, A Space for the Unbound becomes an intensely rewarding experience that pulls all the right heartstrings. While it starts out slow and tedious and perhaps focuses too much on light arcade sequences, eventually a multi-layered plot with clever puzzles accompanied by engrossing atmosphere and music emerge to treat those who stick with it. It may not be perfect, but this ambitious, culturally distinctive narrative adventure by Mojiken is an easy recommendation.

Blackwell Unbound

Publisher: Wadjet Eye
Developer: Wadjet Eye
Year: 2007
Platform: Windows, Linux, Mac, iOS, Android

Rating: 6

Right on the heels of The Blackwell Legacy, Dave Gilbert took a risk and went straight to a prequel, which is an especially odd choice given that the first game is far from epic and barely explored the characters there. Yet it still works, and I found myself enjoying the experience significantly more.

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The Samaritan Paradox

Publisher: Screen 7
Developer: Faravid
Year: 2014
Platform: Windows, Linux

Rating: 3

While the 2010s and beyond have really brought back the pixel-art adventure, I don’t think I’ve played any game that mimics it so specifically as does The Samaritan Paradox. From the low resolution graphics to the pop up text boxes that interrupt conversations, I couldn’t stop feeling like I was playing an early 90s Sierra adventure. And while I quite enjoyed this nostalgia trip and some fairly satisfying puzzles, everything flies off the rails near the end which makes this a hard game to recommend.

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The Quarry

Publisher: 2K Games
Developer: Supermassive Games
Year: 2022
Platform: Windows, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series

Rating: 8

As one camp counselor drags her boyfriend into a storm shelter in the middle of the night to investigate some movement she saw, he half-nervously and half-sarcastically says, “Have you seen Evil Dead?” While there is no fourth wall breaking in The Quarry, the characters are definitely aware they are experiencing a horror movie. The forthcoming honest depiction of how nine teenagers might cope with near constant terror is one of the reasons this is one of the best scary games I’ve played.

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Detective Di: The Silk Rose Murders

Publisher: Nupixo, WhisperGames
Developer: Nupixo
Year: 2019
Platform: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Switch, Xbox One, XBox Series

Rating: 3

Di Renjie was a chancellor during the Tang and Zhou dynasties and has been portrayed in modern media of being the Chinese Sherlock Holmes. Minh Ta, the founder of Nupixo, developed a murder mystery game to honor and continue that reputation. While the overall story is a good one and it was interesting to learn some Chinese history and lore, this is ultimately a fairly weak gaming experience.

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Call of Cthulhu: Shadow of the Comet

Publisher: Infogrames
Developer: Infogrames
Year: 1993
Platform: DOS, Windows, Mac, Linux

Rating: 3

I really wanted to like this game. While I’m not a fan of Lovecraft’s stories, the mythos fascinates me. I would not expect it to, since it more or less boils down to cult worshiping of tentacled gods. But the appeal to me, I think, comes from the notion that humans can be driven mad if they dare to know too much about the universe’s power. It certainly helps that Anchorhead, one of the best games I’ve ever played, taps into these insecurities so well. Shadow of the Comet certainly does a fine job in this arena as well. Sadly, the ghastly user interface along with some intractable puzzle design left me mostly cold.

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Stasis

Publisher: The Brotherhood, Daedalic Entertainment
Developer: The Brotherhood
Year: 2015
Platform: Windows, Mac

Rating: 4

I regularly talk about my love for abandoned research stations and Stasis attempts to quench that thirst. While the premise and plot were interesting enough to hold my attention, I was ultimately left unsatiated thanks to some poor characterizations and ridiculous puzzles.

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Detroit: Become Human

Publisher: Quantic Dream
Developer: Quantic Dream
Year: 2018
Platform: Windows, PS4

Rating: 10

Detroit opens in an elevator as we see Connor (an android whose manufacturer contracts with the police department) flip a quarter back and forth at dizzying speed between his hands. The moment the familiar ding notifies Connor he’s reached his destination, we watch the quarter stop between two fingers, Washington’s face shining with perfect detail. The scene is totally unnecessary, but it sent chills up my spine and my anticipation through the roof. I was not disappointed.

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Demon’s Forge

Publisher: Brian Fargo
Developer: Brian Fargo
Year: 1981
Platform: PC Booter, Apple II

Rating: 1

I played this as a child and never got out of the first area. I figured I was young and impatient and decided to revisit this with additional forbearance and wisdom. I got exactly as far as I did thirty-five years ago before pulling up a walkthrough.

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