Reviews from

in the past


Culturally queer and nerdy, whenever you can breathe sets a grounded story about mental health in a supermarket staffed by friends. There's three of them, a shopping list, and a lot of encouragement to go to therapy. There's a little bit of traditional videogaming, too, in the form of finding things on the list, some sokobon, and a bit of maze navigation. But that mostly seems there to hang serious dialog on and to remind the main character that they are loved and supported.

recently, when I go to trader joe's I get lightly panicked. its so overwhelming with people, crowds, and ridiculous items.

in whenever you can breathe you have a shopping list, but carts and immovable people block your wanted items. How many minutes have I spent waiting for someone to clear out of the way in front of the item I want, just to continually be cut off by people who swoop in over another person's shoulder to grab the item?

These ideas, and more, come through in whenever you can breathe.

roomie: sniff even my favorite video game composer is a lgbtq hating piece of shit

i haven't played this, but i HAVE played flaming/million.

it's a deterritorialization of queerness, fracturing it into archetypal character tropes thru a blender.