This weekās itch.io-based Bundle For Ukraine, organized by Necrosoft Games, has already raised $4 million for International Medical Corps and Voices of Children, and still has a week to go. Itās bloody wonderful! It also results in everyone having 992 video games, physical games, books, and albums in their account, which is quite the daunting prospect. So let us help.
Itch.ioās charity bundles are an extraordinary thing. Last year, Alanna Linayre organized a bundle that raised $900,000 for Palestine, while the year before itch.io themselves hosted the Bundle for Racial Justice and Equality that raised a mindblowing $8.1 million. Now itās happening all over again, in response to the atrocities in Ukraine, and hopefully the millions of dollars pouring in will make a real difference.
But each time, the result for the kindly giver is a complete avalanche of games, under which one can become too easily buried. Wonāt someone think of the people with too many games to play?
To help, Iāve gone through and picked out some absolute gems amongst the 573 games youāll now own, to at least give you a way in. I donāt want to spend too much time on the most obvious picks, because I assume you already know to check out Skatebird, Wandersong, SUPERHOT, and Baba Is You. Instead, letās delve deeper.
Ynglet
One of last yearās best games, Ynglet (from the flawless developer Nifflas) reimagined platforming as a form of swimming, then set it in a minimalist world of colourful joy. Itās a deep dive into satisfying movement, and such a clever study of platforming, offering interesting challenge while feeling calm and happy. Itās pretty damned masterful.
Midnight Scenes
Pixel artist Octavi Navarro, who provided the art for Thimbleweed Park, has turned his hand to a series of episodic adventures inspired by The Twilight Zone. Each of the three released episodes tells a short, mysterious tale with a twist ending, and all of them are included in the bundle. I especially enjoyed the second one, The Goodbye Note.
Sagebrush
Donāt be fooled by the odd title card on the video aboveāSagebrush is in fact a super-low-poly adventure game, about returning to the abandoned site of a former cult. Many years back there was a mass suicide, and now you are wandering over the collapsing remains, in a surprisingly sensitive, yet very harrowing narrative. It so cleverly avoids sensationalism or exploitation, and instead offers a sombre, moving exploration of a very difficult topic.
The White Door
Developers Rusty Lake have been making extraordinarily odd, Lynchian games for years, and I highly recommend their archive. From it, you now own the superbly spooky Rusty Lake Hotel, and also The White Room, an intriguingly weird spin-off game that sits alongside the series. Donāt find out anything, just play it. Trust me.
Welcome To Elk
Just out on Nintendo Switch last month, Welcome To Elk was one of 2020ās best games, and somehow people didnāt notice. This is an absolutely stunning story of small-town Scandinavia, using mixed media from point-and-click cartoon adventure to FMV film interviews. Itās about death, grief, loneliness and friendship, and manages this without being morose or maudlin. Also it contains gamingās greatest ever minigame, in which you cannot help but make beautiful music.
Secrets Of Raetikon
Iād forgotten about Secrets Of Raetikon! Certainly itās unspellable name doesnāt help with that, but what a fool I am, because this is just titrated loveliness. You play a bird in a polygonal world, and your job as a bird is to fly around. Thatās what birds are paid for. Whatās most important here is just how well it does that flying, making its puzzles and collectibles a pleasure to play, in amongst an animal world. Iām so pleased to have been reminded to play this some more!
Batbarian: Testament Of The Primordials
You know where a lot of metroidvanias go wrong? They sort of donāt want to be played by you. Sure, they want to be played by Steve, but god, donāt you think braggy old Steve has enough games already? Batbarian is far more interested in you, and couldnāt care less if Steve likes it or not. Bloody Steve. Itās an explore-me-do platform game which lets you choose the difficulty. It absolutely can be Steve-like, tough-as-nails impossibility, but if you find boss fights a barrier to your entertainment, then just set the game to slow motion, or bump up your attack, or make healing far more effective. Itās a game that trusts you to pick the setup that works for you. And then helpfully offers a flipping marvellous time playing it.
Gutwhale
Hereās whatās wrong with so many roguelikes: You never see the end! (OK, yes, I know, but letās just go with it.) Gutwhale is that rarest of things: a short roguelike. Somehow built in only a month, by only three people, this is a manic and wonderful action-platformer in which you can only carry one bullet at a time. Once youāve fired it, you need to go pick it up again, see? And if you catch it before it hits the ground, then refire, thatās a combo! Itās just brilliant.
As Iāve scrolled through the joyful madness, looking for games with which Iām already familiar and can heartily recommend, Iāve spotted so very many more I now desperately want to play next. This is an astonishing collection of games, raising an astonishing amount of money. Donāt miss out on this
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