While we haven’t left the house much this year, video games have still let our imaginations run wild and take flight. Adventure games are often characterized by individual players and limited character interaction, this year has seen a much more expanded interpretation of the genre. From multiplayer experiences to a roster of NPCs to meet and communicate with. Which has been a balm for anyone that has spent this year more or less alone. In no particular order, here are the best adventure games that came out of the hell year that was 2020.
Also in Wccftech's Best Games of 2020 lists: Action, Horror, Strategy & Simulation
On top of the hours of text, 13 Sentinels also included some light strategy and management elements, that made sure the players felt connected, as well as some side-scrolling. This last aspect. coupled with the chance to analyze and explore documents as you progress truly cemented 13 Sentinels as an adventure game that allows you to explore a rich story and intriguing world.
The puzzles are creative and sometimes thought-provoking, and the world is strange in that way that fairytales feel familiar but otherworldly, serene but unsafe, and rich with the possibility of exploration and discovery. The Last Campfire slipped under the radar somewhat this year, but it is a wonderful, wholesome experience worth remembering as you continue into the next year.
While Life is Strange never hid itself way from challenging narratives and scenes, grappling everything from homelessness and systemic racism, Tell Me Why brings its sometimes uncomfortable narrative under a microscope. You’ll be falling out with lifelong friends and uncovering unwanted secrets as you delve into the life of the twins and their mother, grappling with anti-trans attitudes and mental health the whole way.
You’ll be exploring this beautiful island instead, with an art style that makes the whole game feel like the cover of a 1920s pulp fiction magazine, and solve a variety of mind-bending and challenging puzzles. Call of the Sea is a lovely story, told in a refreshing and thoughtful manner that might make Lovecraftian inspired work more accessible to audiences that never managed before.
In Other Waters sits somewhere between a management game like Papers Please, and an old school text adventure like Zork. You will read and imagine this surreal landscape that the game describes, and the creatures that inhabit it, but you’ll rarely see it. But despite this, the game is beautiful with its blue and gold colour palette and minimalist menus and screens. Exploring in In Other Waters is a very thoughtful, exciting, and personal experience compared to other adventure games. And on top of all of that, the story is gripping and well-paced to have you constantly reaching out into the next section looking for answers.
It is also a game about showing off, or at least presenting your best self to others. You can visit and invite other players to your island, interacting in the most adorable ways. It is an adventure into yourself and into the personalities of others. It is calm, colourful, and comforting. It is possibly the perfect game of 2020 and stands in peaceful opposition to everything the year has thrown at you.
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