We’re starting this week’s trip with a spell down in Logan Forman’s cauldron. Did you check the recipe? I don’t think it called for an entire human skeleton…
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— log an form an (@dev_dwarf) June 20, 2020
I’ve wandered into Forman’s (as-yet-untitled) forests a few times over the course of running this column. There’s a lovely simplicity to the stacked 2D style, a calming hike that suddenly flashes into a blood-tinted elsewhere. While they’re clearly very different games, there’s is something quite Proteus about the bold, flat colours of Forman’s low-resolution woods. Except, I gather, they’ll be used to frame quirky skeletal adventures, rather than crying over the passing of the seasons.
Here’s a thought - have you ever, in your life, finished a grocery trip under par?
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— Scoundrelworks (@scoundrelworks) June 20, 2020
I don’t know if Dale Winton was an avid golfer. But if he was, I’m sure he’d more than approve of Supermarket Strokes, a Supermarket Sweep-inspired golf ’em up that has you trying to complete your shopping trip in as few strokes as possible. It’s currently free to mess around with over on Itch - which is both cheaper and more socially acceptable than hurling a trolley down the cereal aisle at Lidl.
While I don’t usually go for games about commerce and trade, it turns out that all I need to pique my interest is a masterfully-sketched township in need of some grain.
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— MightofMerchants (@MightofMe) June 20, 2020
Might Of Merchants almost feels too blunt a name for something so delicate. Yes, the game is ostensibly about “trade, wealth and dynasties” across a medieval kingdom - but it’s drawn so carefully, townships and castles folded upon a canvas and lightly inked. Monochrome spaces are given a sense of season and time with varying lighting setups, and I almost worry that any given scene would wash away in a dash of rain. Remarkable stuff.
Let’s end today’s roundup by taking the “screenshot” part of this column’s title to heart, eh? Say cheese, Shutter Stroll.
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— Jannik Boysen ✨ #ShutterStroll is out NOW! ?? (@jannik_boysen) June 20, 2020
Releasing on Itch earlier this month, Shutter Stroll is a procedural photography trip. Rather than the dense photography labyrinths of Umurangi Generation, developer Jannik Boysen has created a No Man’s Sky for shutterbugs, serving up endless, vivid landscapes to capture on digital film.