Have you played this game?You can rate this game, record that you've played it, or put it on your wish list after you log in. |
A dream-like journey through a drifting life.
Headphones recommended.
v.9: 08-Feb-2017 16:55 -
MathBrush
(Current Version)
- Edit Page - Normal View
Changed genre | |
v.8: 07-Sep-2016 10:38 - phantomwilliams Changed external review links | |
v.7: 04-Jan-2016 19:11 - phantomwilliams Changed download links | |
v.6: 16-Nov-2015 09:58 - Jason McIntosh Changed download links | |
v.5: 16-Nov-2015 00:29 - classicaljunkie Changed download links | |
v.4: 15-Nov-2015 20:11 - phantomwilliams Changed download links | |
v.3: 03-Oct-2015 09:45 - phantomwilliams Changed download links | |
v.2: 02-Oct-2015 00:09 - dutchmule Changed cover art | |
v.1: 01-Oct-2015 15:30 - Brendan Patrick Hennessy
Created page |
giantbomb.com
Meg Jayanth's Top 10 Games of 2015
"There is beauty and purpose to be found in each fantastical place in the game, but also an underlying desolation, a bittersweetness that comes through Phantom Williams' prose in combination with Ben Wasserman's music. (You must play it with the sound up.) But the most telling choice in Summit is to linger in these places--learning arts, making connections--or to leave, and continue on your quest to reach the elusive, ever-distant Summit. Both choices feel equally valid, equally terrible--stay and actually live life at the cost of giving up your dream, or go on with your journey but give up the people, places, magics that you are starting to know?"
See the full review
RockPaperShotgun
IF Only: Strangely Thought - by Emily Short
"Summit tells the story of a journey through a strange land. The eponymous summit is your goal, but it doesn’t matter if you don’t get there: there are many other places you can end up, and many ways you can read the experience. Perhaps you’ll stop and live in a city for a while, or join a university, or take part in an archaeological study. And periodically you will need to open up your fishstomach and consume one of the many symbiotic fish that swim within. Consuming fish is a sign, and probably even a cause, of mortality, but you also can’t really live without fish. Everyone has a fishstomach. There are stories of a time when people didn’t have fishstomachs, but nowadays, everyone does.....Summit looks at the brighter side of death. Our lives are finite, but it is that boundedness that gives our choices meaning. We can’t go everywhere and do everything."
See the full review