Melon Journey: Bittersweet Memories

released on Apr 06, 2023

Melon Journey: Bittersweet Memories is a story-exploration game about revisiting a town full of adorable animals with eccentric personalities. Yet under its cute and nostalgic surface lies a dark tale of crime and corruption... Play as Honeydew, an employee of a huge melon factory, and travel to Hog Town where melons are illegal. While searching for a missing friend, you'll have to explore the town and its surrounding areas, and speak with suspicious characters in dangerous situations to uncover the truth.


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It's cute, I like all the little interpersonal connections

Com uma história cheia de reviravoltas e críticas sociais junto de personagens carismáticos e interessantes, Melon Journey: Bittersweet Memories é um excelente adventure que desperta nossa nostalgia com seus gráficos em pixel art e sua trilha sonora em jazz lo-fi. A falta de uma localização pt-br pode afastar alguns jogadores, mas ainda assim esse indie segue sendo uma das gratas surpresas do ano.

Review completa em: https://psxbrasil.com.br/analise/melon-journey-bittersweet-memories-review/

L'unica cosa che si fa durante tutto il gioco è parlare con personaggi più o meno eccentrici mentre si tenta di svelare diciamo un mistero all'interno di un contesto che subito appare come fintamente perfetto. Per quel che riguarda il design sicuramente è il punto forte, la storia invece rimane semplice come già si può immaginare sin dall'inizio. Non una esperienza particolare ma sicuramente dolce, l'assenza di un gameplay effettivo rende particolarmente pesante la ripetizione di certi trope che non rendono necessariamente brutta l'esperienza ma per i miei gusti tendono a divertirmi poco se non giusto nei punti più alti. Oltre a questo trovo un po' di materiale sprecato (quindi aspettatevi di non capire alcuni dettagli), ma probabilmente sarà tutto utilizzato per un continuo

It was pretty cute. Not too advanced in the gameplay, but I thought the characters were funny even if the story's conclusion was a little disappointing. I got used to the all-green color scheme pretty quickly and I found all but one item.

There's a book called "Dog Kapital" by Karl Melon. Read it?

>Yes


I'm in my thirties, I look like Max Payne from the end of Max Payne 3, and I've been pulled into my boss' office on more than one occasion and talked to about my unfriendly demeanor. I might not strike you as someone who likes cute things, but I do! So much so that Melon Journey: Bittersweet Memories sold me off the adorable charm of its cover alone, with its clay-art characters and bubbly title font. I'm a bit self-conscious about admitting how easily drawn in I am by cute things, but it would be disingenuous to say I didn't immediately fall in love with this thing.

I otherwise went into this game sight-unseen, having previously read a review by Moschidae which I had since forgotten because I have the memory retention of a slug. I do recall being a bit apprehensive as I feel a lot of deceptively cute indie games like to hide traumatic elements or dig at something more emotionally complex than what you might absorb at face value. Not that there's anything wrong with that, but I just wanna pal around with some cute animals for about 3 to 5 hours, man. There are a few times one of the various goobers you encounter in town has their feelings hurt and runs away crying and like that made me feel bad because I'm a big softie.

You also join a gang and kidnap the mayor's son, so it's got like, an edge to it. The Cavity Crew don't fuck around, their teeth are rotting out of their skull!

Melon Journey: Bittersweet Memories is a story driven game, lacking any heavy gameplay elements beyond knowing where to go and who to talk to in order to complete small quests and advance the story. You play as Honeydew, an employee at a melon soda factory who gets sucked into a conspiracy involving the distribution of contraband melon seeds to a neighboring town where they have been outlawed. Honeydew must solve "minor" problems like recovering a stolen violin, reuniting a pup with his parents, and busting cats out of jail while slowly uncovering the deeper conspiracy behind the melon trade, which goes to the highest echelons of political and corporate power. Why are melons illegal in Hog Town? I don't know, but I've seen what melon addiction is doing to this town and it's messed up!

I wasn't expecting this game to be so funny or even as subversive as it is. There's loads of goofy little scenes you can find by poking around in Hog Town, and Melon Journey's core cast of characters are all endearing. Kitten Princess and Strong Dog are perhaps one of gaming's greatest power couples (literally, they're powerful), and I really enjoyed Lily's backstory about how her estrangement from her parents led her to become radicalized against authority figures. There's plenty of shots taken against capitalism and governmental corruption, but nothing so complex as to feel tonally out of place or against the grain of Melon Journey's sense of humor. Not that I don't vibe with the message, Cavity Crew says fuck the police. Thievery Snake will burn the jail to the ground if given the opportunity.

My only complaint here is that there's not enough Detective Hamlumbo. How are you going to drop a classic character like that on me in the first ten minutes of the game and never loop back around to him? Wasted potential. Perhaps he'll show up in the sequel, which is set up if you're willing to resolve all of the Cavity Crew's problems and earn the true ending. Word of advice: all of these side quests are pretty intuitive but you can miss steps and cross points of no return so you might want to pull a guide up just to make sure you don't skip something small yet mandatory. 100% completion is otherwise not hard to achieve, and I feel like you're really missing out if you don't see a lot of these side stories through to their conclusion. This is a game not about the destination but the (Melon) journey.

Had a great time with this. It's cute, it's got loads of Game Boy charm and is remarkably expressive despite its graphical limitations, the writing is just plain fun, and it speaks to me on a personal level considering my own crippling addiction to carbonated beverages. If you told me NOS had some mind controlling agent in it, I'd buy that, but I'd still keep drinking that garbage.