sepiaaura
yellow-bird
sepiaaura

The soundtrack is actually FANTASTIC! Each group of levels is played to a new song (usually by different artist) and honestly, right now the biggest satisfaction of unlocking a new group of levels, is getting the new song.

I might get this game just because of the music... so damn good.

Alright. Let’s be honest. Who else forgot this game existed until reading this?

This is the definition of white privilege, Ms. Fever. It is not your right to police Asian men’s performance of Asian-ness (for lack of a better word), as much as it’s not my right to police your performance of femininity. As several commenters noted below, what you perceive as Asian men “rolling over” for white

Maybe try not policing how people of color handle themselves and worry about fellow white people who enable this behaviour. Marginalized people wouldn’t have to grovel and self hate if white people didn't eat that shit up.

I can assure you it happened to me, in Europe. These few strips managed to remind me of my childhood, and suddenly I hate humanity all over again.

I read a few pages of this at a bookstore and as an Asian American, it was too heartbreakingly close to home for me to buy. I may grow a pair and pick up a copy some day.

Being a Kojima title, it isn’t likely to be a coincidence.

Darnit, why do all these kind of games only seem to come to PS4/3. :(

“Everybody’s Gone to the Rapture is a creature I fear will be killed if I crack it open to examine its entrails.”

I liked what Rym De Coster said in a PAX Panel (paraphrasing here);

Still weird that people don’t get that there are multiple ways that games can be played and enjoyed. Yes, we can get into semantic debates over whether stuff like Dear Esther are really ‘games’, but regardless of the labeling these can be enjoyable and worthwhile experiences.

If you die in the game, you die in real life. Boom, now all video games are nauseatingly exciting.

It's interactive; it has objectives; thus it's a game.

That's a crime it didn't make it in here. I played this with my kids this weekend and they loved it. Then my six year old son went upstairs, started cutting construction paper, asked his mom for something, and came in looking like this.

And that was just fine with me. Learning about this family and their motivations piece by piece was a surprisingly enjoyable experience for me. I hadn't played anything like it before and genuinely felt attached to them by the time I got to the end. The fact this took place without physically meeting anyone else in

The Gone Home devs' follow up game should focus on a men's rights activist struggling to come to terms with having his opinions validated less and less frequently. Also he's magically switched bodies with his hamster.