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A jam submission

The Evil HourView game page

A work of critical-creative philosophy juxtaposing works by Nietzsche and Augustine
Submitted by Benny Mattis — 10 hours, 26 minutes before the deadline
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The Evil Hour's itch.io page

Results

CriteriaRankScore*Raw Score
Popular winner#15.0005.000

Ranked from 1 rating. Score is adjusted from raw score by the median number of ratings per game in the jam.

Judge feedback

Judge feedback is anonymous.

  • This piece, in my opinion, represented really well the meshing of creative and critical, as it interprets and performs the positions of the two philosophers.

What work(s) of philosophy does your piece take as its primary source(s)?
Nietzsche, Friedrich. The Gay Science.

Please tell us about your piece.
Narrativized as one possible prequel to Nietzsche’s _Thus Spake Zarathustra_, _The Evil Hour_ juxtaposes Nietzsche’s prior work _The Joyful Wisdom_ (sometimes translated as “_The Gay Science_”) with Augustine’s early work on _True Religion_, situating both pieces as life-affirming answers to the spiritual threat of negative self-talk. The narrative setting of a Zarathustra character's origin story functions strictly in service of the work’s chief aim: to see _The Gay Science_ and _True Religion_ in a new light.

More specifically, _The Evil Hour_ points to parallels between these two works through the accusations hurled at Z by S, the game’s primary antagonist. Having been branded a heretic by his colleagues in the Priestly Council, Z faces an imminent threat of death by hemlock; S, who would have Z go the way of Socrates rather than escape with his life, seeks to draw Z into a self-destructive nihilism. In response, Z can answer S’s remarks with verses drawn from Nietzsche or Augustine, illustrating how _The Joyful Wisdom_ and _True Religion_ address comparable issues in comparable ways.

A secondary purpose of this game is to suggest an alternative interpretation of the four-book structure of _The Gay Science_. Passages selected from Nietzsche are intended to be (relatively) representative of the Book (I, II, III, or IV) in which they are located. Scholars are invited to consider whether any merit might be found in mapping S’s four disparagements to the core themes of the four books included in the first (1882) edition of Nietzsche’s work (disregarding for the moment the Prologue and fifth Book added in 1887).

What other sources have you used in your piece?
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ohvVHeedpwDnxkDeYRYwn2mkVm-HTKdHJQWCSOIWvbY/edit?usp=sharing

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Comments

Jam JudgeSubmitted(+1)

I really enjoyed this juxtaposition of Augustine and Nietzsche and your employment of Twine is certainly inspirational! *****

Developer

Thank you!!

Jam JudgeSubmitted

Wow, this is cool! I really like the ominous atmosphere of the game and it's a fun way for me to engage with philosophers that I am not that well acquainted with. Really good job!

Developer

That's great to hear! Thank you for playing.

Jam JudgeSubmitted

This was a fun game! I liked your use of subtracting options (forks in the path) once one had recited particular lines of text. The countdown clock was also a neat idea. I was  surprised at first when it said that I had no time left but that I could keep the dialogue going; but I assume this was to allow me to play the full game. Thanks for making it.

Developer(+1)

Thank you for playing! And yes, there are alternate endings depending on whether the timer runs out, but I did not want to prevent anyone from seeing all the textual comparisons up to the end.  From making this game and playing others in this jam, I've gained a new appreciation for the multiple different ways designers can balance narrative, gameplay, and thematic message.

Host (1 edit)

Hi, there! It should become possible for you to vote if you click this link.

Please give only one 5-star rating to a single project -- that is, please vote only once, for your very favorite project, that isn't your own. This is to ensure that the popular winner doesn't go to the project that happens to be rated the most times.

Voting will close when the counter on the jam page reaches zero, at 23:59/11:59PM CET/GMT+1 on December 12th, 2022! Your vote will not be made public until the full results for the competition are announced on December 15th on the jam page and on the jam community board.

While you can only vote for one submission, please leave as many comments as you like on all the submissions that strike your fancy! This goes for anyone who entered the jam or who stumbles upon it on the site, even if they didn't submit anything or can't vote! It'd be wonderful to get some good discussions going. If you're not sure where to start with evaluating projects, I've prepared a list of questions to ask yourself as you explore and reflect upon your experiences with each one here. I hope they're helpful to you!

As always, if you have any questions, please either reply to this message or post on the jam's FAQ here. Thank you!

Host

Hi, there! Would you mind re-uploading your sources to a Google doc page? Thank you!

Developer

Hello, thank you for hosting this jam! I have moved the reference information to a Google doc and updated the link in my submission. Please let me know if you have any trouble accessing it, or if any other elements should be changed.

Host

My pleasure! It works perfectly, thank you.