I am a fan of poetry, but not generally of procedurally generated poetry, except for the Mary Jane of Tomorrow. This program generates random, disjointed ghazal-form poems based on some input.
I think more could have been, for instance with rhyming procedurally or otherwise using the stricter forms of Ghazal.
I'll admit, I was disappointed, because I thought this game actually had a series of secret coded messages that you had to decrypt, from hints in the text.
But this is actually a bunch die of letters from a girl to the player that talk about life and difficulties. The styling is great, and the game is polished and descriptive. There was some strong profanity.
Really polished, but relatively short and hard to piece together.
I beta tested this game. A single playthrough of this game takes you through a series of battles and explorations in a luxury apartment building after a zombie apocalypse.
The game is not too long, and there are some difficulties with the translation. However, on more playthroughs, it has more features: more branches, randomization, multiple languages.
This game is actually exactly what a great short game looks like about 1/2 to 3/4 of the way through the writing process. There is a good storyline with side bits, the main walkthrough is implemented, there aren't that many bugs, but it isn't really all the way there: there are some descriptions that were written quickly and need revising, many objects are unimplemented, conversations need more topics, and all of the thousand little responses for standard actions and wrong attempts need to be added.
This game is mostly about fixing the curtain so the stage can go up. It does a good job of characterizing the different individuals involved.
This is a very branching game, with, I assume, 10 endings (I've seen 4 or 5).
It has extensive styling of the words and background, which was a little grating but much better than the standard style.
This was a mostly branching game, meaning that most choices end up sending you on different paths. However, a lot of the paths are just quick bad endings, so there is one main correct path.
The story and writing were okay, I would say above average for unedited Internet stories. There was some profanity, but not a lot.
Overall, it could be a fun short sci fi game for a lunch break.
This game has a big setting, with around 132 rooms, most of which are empty hotel rooms you don't need to visit.
There is a steampunk hotel with automated bellhop and clockwork mechanisms that you glimpse briefly, before a future setting in a regular house. As many have stated, this is pretty skimpily implemented. Playing it with the walkthrough reminds me a lot of Deadline Enchanter, but in that game, the sketchiness was intentional, and a walkthrough was included.
If you're into steampunk, play this with a walkthrough.
I was a beta-tester for this game. This is one of the longest Twine games available. It's about a character who is trapped, and is having flashbacks to how they got there.
It's a sci fi Gane, with much of it aboard a Star Trek-Esqye vessel (although a small one). It deals with the characters relationship with the crew members.
There is an overall framing story as well involving recorded memory. As part of the framing story, the early text is purposely stilted and formal.
This game seems like the author took everyone one of Poe's stories, drew a picture of the ending of it, summarized it in a humorous way, and then built a branching tree of decisions where each branch ends at a different picture/parody.
This was pretty entertaining, but it's tedious to look for more than a half dozen endings. Best for fans of Poe, pastiche, or old fashioned CYOA books.
In this game, you play as a character waking out of a deep sleep before interacting with an alien species.
This game relies a lot on heavy front-loading of information, most of which is not actually necessary for the game, because it generally teaches commands and the most common commands are listed in the Quest interpreter as drop-down boxes.
After the front-loading, there are a few actions you need to take that are more fast-paced.
The storyline is interesting, but I feel like the different parts of the game could have been incorporated more smoothly, perhaps with the manuals spread out more. However, the game is implemented well, and doesn't seem to have any bugs as far as I can see.
Recommended for fans of hard sci-fi looking for a short parser game.
This game consists of 7 chapters in a scifi setting with heavy Greek mythology references.
This game is very dense with invented words and phrases. It reminds me of To Burn in Memory from 2015; both games have text that makes subconscious sense but whose meaning is hard to grasp.
I think the issue is that none of the setting or mythology matters; the game might as well be about someone getting dressed for the morning. This is because you never need to use your knowledge about the setting to progress. Almost all links return to the previous page, and there are no opportunities for 'missed chances'. If the game made you make some tough, clearly marked irreversible choices, with delayed consequences, or used the knowledge it dispenses it dispenses.