36 Days A Week
A collection of 36 non linear poems.
A multidimensional prison cube left abandoned and unfinished.
6 Living Beings.
1 "ending"
1 cool song by Ostin.
Made in Bitsy.
Status | Canceled |
Platforms | HTML5 |
Rating | Rated 3.7 out of 5 stars (15 total ratings) |
Author | JohnLee Cooper |
Genre | Interactive Fiction |
Made with | bitsy |
Tags | 2D, Bitsy, Horror, lame, Music, Open World, Pixel Art, poem, sad, shitty |
Comments
Log in with itch.io to leave a comment.
I think I was close to finishing this game, but I got a little bit lost with the pattern of the map. I do want to go back to it and draw on paper the shapes of this diced/3D map... but at the same time, I was not very impressed by the poetry, so will see! From the itch.io Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality.
Just played through, really enjoyed it! Loved the structure-- it seemed confusing and random at first, and became more clear through trial and error-- eventually, started to be able to visualize the shape of it. Really fun experience. Would love to see a more fully-realized game with this kind of map structure.
Awesome, glad to hear confirmation at least someone figured out the structure lol.
In a similar vein https://twitter.com/_CodeParade_ is making a hyperbolic game, and https://twitter.com/ZenoRogue made HyperRogue, and other stuff with complex geometries.
Thanks-- I will check them out!
Is JohnLee okay?
hehe im doin ok, thanks for askin, and thanks for streamin the game, thats really cool!
this is like my third time playing this and i finally got to the ending! its a good mess, thank you for making it
This game is a beast! It consumed part of my life.. lucky for me I found my way out.
I love the poems very deep
Thank you. I found the words painful, the design ingenious, the ending frustrating to locate, and the experience nigh-tearful. For quite a while I was afraid the ending was simply when you gave up, turned it off in frustration as you never found the blasted rope again. As it is not, I would say there is a second ending: leaving the game unfinished.
I am glad I did not take that second path.
Thank you, for sharing a piece of your soul with me.
thanks! one of the best comments ive ever recieved on anything.