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Spiritfarer review – a beautiful, unique blend of genreson 18 August 2020 at 6:00 pm Eurogamer.net

The ferryman has come to collect Stella for her last journey, on a plane between the land of the living and the afterlife. As she sits in Charon’s boat, he gives her one final job – to help a few souls let go of the regrets that anchor them to life and allow them to pass on.

It sounds like a stately job. A cosy, tranquil journey. In reality however, Spiritfarer isn’t a journey across calm seas so much as a sprint. You’re given your own boat and set off to explore the spirit realm. In its towns and mountain villages you find spirits willing to join you, but before they can actually move on to the afterlife, you need to both build them a space on your boat to enjoy and coax out their story so they may eventually find closure.

Soon, an eclectic group of passengers settles in. Your first passenger, Dawn, for example, is a fawn with fur so plush it looks like she’s wearing a stola. She also has a penchant for smoking. Your uncle Atul, a rotund frog, used to be a handyman and loves sharing food with others. Making them feel at home begins with gathering the resources needed to build a personalised cabin for each passenger. Distinct from the in- and outside, these cabins ooze flair and showcase their owners’ personalities, but the best thing about them is how they sit on a boat. You stack them on top of each other like a game of management Tetris, and as your boat grows and you gain new buildings, you may have to move them around in order to find a good spot for each. Just watching the stack grow is an amazingly satisfying visual representation of progress. Stella navigates between these buildings like a character in a side-scrolling platformer, and she has similar abilities, too, which isn’t surprising given Thunder Lotus’ metroidvania roots.

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The ferryman has come to collect Stella for her last journey, on a plane between the land of the living and the afterlife. As she sits in Charon’s boat, he gives her one final job – to help a few souls let go of the regrets that anchor them to life and allow them to pass on.It sounds like a stately job. A cosy, tranquil journey. In reality however, Spiritfarer isn’t a journey across calm seas so much as a sprint. You’re given your own boat and set off to explore the spirit realm. In its towns and mountain villages you find spirits willing to join you, but before they can actually move on to the afterlife, you need to both build them a space on your boat to enjoy and coax out their story so they may eventually find closure.Soon, an eclectic group of passengers settles in. Your first passenger, Dawn, for example, is a fawn with fur so plush it looks like she’s wearing a stola. She also has a penchant for smoking. Your uncle Atul, a rotund frog, used to be a handyman and loves sharing food with others. Making them feel at home begins with gathering the resources needed to build a personalised cabin for each passenger. Distinct from the in- and outside, these cabins ooze flair and showcase their owners’ personalities, but the best thing about them is how they sit on a boat. You stack them on top of each other like a game of management Tetris, and as your boat grows and you gain new buildings, you may have to move them around in order to find a good spot for each. Just watching the stack grow is an amazingly satisfying visual representation of progress. Stella navigates between these buildings like a character in a side-scrolling platformer, and she has similar abilities, too, which isn’t surprising given Thunder Lotus’ metroidvania roots.Read moreEurogamer.net

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