Very tricky to rate, this one. I played this after both Pony Island and Inscryption, so I had some idea what I was getting myself into, and yet the game still ended up surprising me.

In general, I'd say it feels less coherent than Mullins' other titles, and it has by far the most obfuscated storyline of the three; I found reading up on it after playing greatly enhanced my appreciation of this one, which seems like an odd thing to say about a game that I am recommending... Overall it feels like by far the least accessible of the Mullins trilogy.

I was a bit worried that it was going to turn into a reference humour / gaming industry celebrating itself kinda affair after the first couple of chapters; there is a bit of it, but by the latter part of the game the theming has moved onto... something else. I found much of the first half of the game quite weak and a bit cringey with the reference humour; the game actually does a fantastic job of justifying its early weaknesses later on, but this doesnt do much to improve your experience of these bits on your first playthrough.

All in all, it's a game you have to be prepared to push through the beginning of to get to the Mullinsy goodness within. I can recommend it but it's /definitely/ not for everyone.

Reviewed on Apr 05, 2023


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