Ratings and Reviews by Tabitha

View this member's profile

Show reviews only | ratings only
View this member's reviews by tag: Ectocomp 2023 Ectocomp 2024 IF Review-a-thon 2024 IF Review-a-thon 2025 IFComp 2023 IFComp 2024 PunyJam #4 SeedComp! 2024 Short Games Showcase 2023 Short Games Showcase 2024 Shufflecomp 2023 Spring Thing 2024 Spring Thing 2025
Previous | 371–380 of 487 | Next | Show All


Never Gives Up Her Dead, by Mathbrush
Tabitha's Rating:

Glass, by Emily Short
Tabitha's Rating:

A Thousand Thousand Slimy Things, by Charm Cochran
Tabitha's Rating:

The Archivist and the Revolution, by Autumn Chen
Tabitha's Rating:

Advent Door, by Andrew Plotkin
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
A very fun little puzzler, December 13, 2023

I don't have much more to say than what's in the title--this was a quick game with a clever mechanic that required mapping and doing some careful thinking to figure out how to achieve what I needed, and it was very satisfying when I succeeded! The bits of worldbuilding and descriptions keep it from being too abstract. A nice way to spend a half hour.

You can log in to rate this review, mute this user, or add a comment.

Thanatophobia, by Robert Goodwin
Tabitha's Rating:

Fairest, by Amanda Walker
Tabitha's Rating:

answer these 10 questions and i'll tell you what kind of lover you are, by frannym
Tabitha's Rating:

The Game Formerly Known as Hidden Nazi Mode, by Victor Gijsbers
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
An effective argument, December 2, 2023

I found this game to be an effective argument that the fear that games may be hiding secret hateful content is silly, because games don't need to do that in order to send ideological messages. While in the accompanying essay the author writes that he "decided to take out all the Nazi stuff," just because the hidden mode is gone (or at least, has been rendered inaccessible via the originally intended method) doesn't mean the game is suddenly perfectly innocent. We're told that the PC took bus 88 to get to their destination, which is Muranowska Square, and our task in the game is to seek out the hiding places of frightened rabbits--which given this context takes on a deeper, more sinister meaning. A child playing this game might never understand or pay attention to these references, but an adult can see that the game is not, as it claims, simply a cute story about bunnies.

This game is an effective illustration that messaging can be baked into games in far more subtle ways than via a "hidden Nazi mode", and for that reason, vetting games for objectionable content is never going to be as simple as glancing over the source code and verifying that it doesn't contain any slurs.

You can log in to rate this review, mute this user, or add a comment.

Little Glass Slipper, by vileidol
Tabitha's Rating:


Previous | 371–380 of 487 | Next | Show All