Thanks for the quick reply! I'm using windows 10, and just the general File Explorer. If I try opening the zip it shows me the files inside and if I click on one of the files I get a message that tells me the files are unable to be openend due to a writing error, I forgot the exact wording but I can look it up of necessary! I'll try to redownload the game this afternoon to see if that changes anything as well!
capsicle247
Recent community posts
Hiya! I have been having great fun with deciphering this game! The narrative is also really captivating. I'm having a little trouble with the end I think? I am not getting a notification that the sorry.zip is password protected so I have nowhere to fill in the password? Should I redownload the game again or is there another way to fix it?
Thank you so much already!
I started this off with no clue about my character, and ended with a full story world with lore in the back of my head that has infinite replay potential. The prompts where very intriguing though it wasn't all too clear to me at first you had to roll the d6 multiple times for some cards because of the way it was worded (like first for figuring out which table to use, and then for how hard the encounter is to overcome, or for the demeanor of a Being). I noticed the further I got the more liberties I started to take and stuck less to the rules of the game, and trusted more on my own writing.
As someone who struggles a lot with creative writing and starting on stories, games like these are incredible to get going and just trust the process and being surprised by twists and turns before running off with all the inspiration offered to create a story!
TLDR: This game is honestly fantastic!!
I just finished playing this for the first time and I must say I absolutely adore it. There were moments where my heart was literally beating out of my chest with tension, I was actually scared at points but it definitely felt like a the game was able to 'win', which is a nice change to many horror rpgs out there.
I love your writing, it's so evocative and inspirational. From the first page (when the actual prologue hadn't even started yet) I already came up with ideas. I loved the map, and the way that it allows you to track your progress and estimate how long you still have to go (useful if you want to take breaks in between!).
Also as Tallywinkle aid as well, the dice rolling works really well. There were encounters where I kept rolling equal successes and failures and you keep being in a stalemate that increases the tension again and again, it felt great adding small hesitant sentences to my journal at every roll, trying to resolve what was happening. I ended up not just writing down the prompts but even narrating and taking creative liberty at the encounters.
All in all I can highly recommend this game to anyone who wants an experience where things happen to you, and you react instead of a game where you have to come up with the things that happen to you.