Home Internet This narrative adventure nails the early ’00s era of internet forums and game communities

This narrative adventure nails the early ’00s era of internet forums and game communities

In Videoverse, I’m scrolling through a community page, liking art, making comments, and checking the responses on my own posts. Then, I get a notification and start messaging an online pal. I can’t quite get over how perfectly Kinmoku’s narrative adventure captures the early days of the internet; I feel like I’ve been transported back in time. It triggers memories of how I used to spend my days in the early 00s after school. When I wasn’t playing The Sims 2, Midtown Madness 3, Pokemon Sapphire, or GTA: Vice City (yes, I was too young for that one), I was on MSN Messenger. My time was also sometimes claimed by an old Nintendo forum I can no longer remember the name of. 

The beauty of Videoverse isn’t just in the way it recreates a fictionalized version of a game console and its online network, it’s also in how it immerses you within it and tells a profound story that completely warmed my heart. The adventure pulled me in so much that I lost track of time as I was playing it, and even though it was far too late at night when the credits rolled, it was completely worth it. Exploring how games and fandoms bring people together, help shape us, and even act as lifeline, the moving message Videoverse left me with is one I needed to be reminded of. 

Feudal Fantasy  

(Image credit: Kinmoku)

In the visual-style narrative adventure, you play as Emmett, a young aspiring artist who’s fallen in love with a game called Feudal Fantasy. Using the fictional console Shark and its online network, you see snippets of the game as Emmett progresses, and then use the network to explore community forums and chat with people on the platform. After some encouragement from a pal, you start posting your own artwork of the game characters in the Feudal Fantasy community. I love that with each passing chapter, the artwork improves, and I share in Emmett’s excitement when they start getting more likes and responses. 

Steadily, you start to notice the art from a new user called Vivi that Emmett really connects with. After engaging with their posts more frequently, I start messaging Vivi directly, and see how a friendship begins to form as they bond over the game. As a decision-based experience, I’m able to choose every response, which lets me shape their relationship as Vivi starts to open up more and more. The connection they develop and the way it strengthens with each online conversation is done in such a natural way – it’s so reminiscent of my own experiences as a teen online in the early days. 

Videoverse

(Image credit: Kinmoku)

 

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