Super Halloween Horror Show has an air of unabashed campy fun in its hybrid of superhero and horror motifs, and the game’s title and cover image reflect this. Given that, I was pleasantly surprised by the subtle sophistication of this limited-parser Petite Mort in which emotional vulnerability is your greatest strength.
You play as a young superhero-in-training with more enthusiasm than experience. When villains strike at the City Commissioner’s Halloween party, you are thrust into the role of defending innocents and saving the day. I was quickly won over by the player character’s earnestness; the bold, pithy prose; and the clever game mechanics, which revolve around the protagonist’s changing emotional state.
The moment the game begins, you must make two discoveries to proceed: (Spoiler - click to show)that your inventory will play a rather unconventional role, and that SHOW will become your go-to verb. With INVENTORY, SHOW, and the classic EXAMINE as your tools, you must gain entry to the Mansion and resolve a series of encounters with NPCs; including a fairly large cast of enemies and allies alike. I found that the puzzles hit a sweet spot of being complex enough to be satisfying and solvable without having to make wild leaps of logic.
Super Halloween Horror Show has quite a lot going on for a small-scale game, including NPCs and elements of the environment that change and an NPC that moves between locations in response to your actions. I’ve never authored a game in Inform myself, but implementing a (seemingly bug-free) parser of this complexity within the constraints posed by an LPM is very impressive to me.