It requires you being at least a hipster to try to pass off as enjoying the ride. Going through a literal hell pondering Sartre-like question about your own identity and relation to others. Oxenfree was straightforward (yet still on par with Afterparty), but it was something most could relate to. If you understand what i've just blabbered about - you'd love the game, but i can certainly see how it's not everyone's cup of cocktail. The story is amazing both in style AND substance, but it is very high-brow and metamodern, brimming with weird puns, existential half-jokes and some serious tone roller coasters. But you can't see everything the game has to offer in one playthrough, as some of your decisions block other paths (think more quantic dream & telltale). Notice the genre - both are essentially adventure games sans unbearable perverted puzzles - all of your decisions lead you somewhere (like all good adventure games should), but contrary to some of the "opinions" here - your decisions DO matter and change the story, although not as much as some would prefer.
This game is a continuation of the traditions set by the studio with their amazing Oxenfree adventure game. So in the grand tradition of only extreme judgement in this red & green world i'm going to be the knight of the tipping order, so as to bring So in the grand tradition of only extreme judgement in this red & green world i'm going to be the knight of the tipping order, so as to bring this score to balance.