Perfect Tides: Station to Station thoughts

Developer: Three Bees
Publisher: Three Bees
Year: 2026
Genre: Adventure
System: Windows

Perfect Tides: Station to Station is a point-and-click adventure where you play as Mara, an eighteen year old woman who has just started college. You experience all that college has to offer you while obtaining new ideas and applying them to papers and other forms of writing. This will be a slimmer and more rambling post because I feel like everything I have to say about the game has already been said by other outlets such as Unwinnable but I thought the game was brilliant and is now one of my favorite adventure games.

a woman saying "Hey, no need to be embarrassed. There was a whole summer I read nothing but computer game novelizations I found in a box behind a grocery store."

One of the many things I was pleasantly surprised by was how much of an improvement it was over the first Perfect Tides, a game that I also thought was very good and well crafted. I was just so surprised by how much more confident this game was in its design, willing to drop more conventional things people expect in adventure games like the multiple verbs and puzzles the first game had, in order to focus more on the choices Mara can make and ability to learn new things. I think having difficult puzzles in this game would have just killed the pacing and wouldn’t fit in with the grounded story this is telling.

Learning new topics was also a really interesting thing to see in an adventure game. It’s been done before of course, this game cites The Dagger of Amon Ra as an influence, but in a way that feels so natural and continuing to explore and talk to other people will improve your knowledge on a topic. It’s masterfully implemented.

Everyone that is of a certain age who plays this will probably relate so much to the references this game makes as well as just what it was like to be a college student and they’re right! For better or worse, I could relate to Mara and just the experience of being a bit of a walking disaster in my late teens. If you don’t relate to that, well, it must be nice to not have that experience.

Anyway, I loved the game and hope it is very successful since it has some of my favorite writing in an adventure game and hope it inspires others to tell personal stories as well.

Perfect Tides: Station to Station is available on Steam and Itch.io, and is coming soon to Nintendo Switch.

Text Adventures Still Rule in the Year 2026

I think a lot of folks who follow this site already know this but people still make text adventure games like during the days of Infocom and they’re still very good! In fact, I think many of them are even better than the classics. That’s not to say the classics are bad, they’re very good, I just think many made post-golden age of text adventures are even better. You can download many free ones on IFDB.

Some that are friendly to beginners that I happen to enjoy are Lost Pig, Galatea, Bronze, and The Dreamhold, but there’s a nice list of more interactive fiction on IFDB’s top 100 list if you’re looking for more to play. Not all of these are text adventures but I also love interactive fiction in the form of Twine games and other forms so no complaints there. I think the commercial text adventure Thaumistry is a good intro to text adventures as well.

If you want to download these free games instead of playing them in a browser, you’ll probably need something to run the files. I think Gargoyle is neat but there’s plenty of options. Some games are also easier to play if you map out the rooms. Personally I love writing these down in a notebook but Trizbort is a nice app for mapping rooms on your computer. I use a desktop version for Windows but apparently there’s now a browser version available.

If you want to see what else folks are up to in the scene, I recommend exploring the rest of IFDB and checking on competitions like IF Comp and Spring Thing. IF Comp has been going on since the 90s. While I stopped following that one for a while because they allowed AI stuff, it seems like they’re starting to clamp down on it so that’s nice.

Anyway, if you’ve never played a text adventure before, give it a shot! Maybe you’ll discover a new genre of games you really enjoy.

DAWN CHORUS [DEMO]

Developer: haraiva, isyourguy, unseconds
Year: 2026
Genre: Interactive Fiction
System: Browser

pop up windows describing hums and a conversation between people texting
Screenshot taken from Itch.io page

DAWN CHORUS is an upcoming interactive fiction game that recently had a demo put online after being shown at ALT: GAMES 2026. The 30 minute demo tells a story about two friends and a band named Dawn Chorus while the world is falling apart. I loved how it uses links that pop up new windows to expand on the world the game is set in, and the art and music do a fantastic job of contributing to the melancholy feeling of trying to live your life while the world is ending. I think the influences section is worth reading too. The sad feeling the game has reminded me a lot of Kentucky Route Zero so it was fun to see that listed after I had played through the demo. It also lists a few DOMINO CLUB games if you want to see the Jupiter Engine and make a game yourself that uses the popup window functionality this game has.

game screenshot saying how a hum can be heard in some parts of the world including Windsor, Ontario

Something that caught me by surprise was the brief mention of the Windsor Hum. I always get excited about things local to me appearing in video games so that was a fun reference. It was a humming noise that people in Windsor, Ontario could hear from 2011 to 2020 and probably came from a factory on an inland between Canada and the USA but was never completely confirmed. You can read more about it on Wikipedia. There’s also a song by Detroit post-punk band Protomartyr that references it.

There’s not much else I can say about the demo without spoiling it but I think it was very well written and I’m looking forward to the full game.

DAWN CHORUS [DEMO] can be played in the browser on Itch.io.

The Dissident by Wavey Games

Developer: Wavey Games
Year: 2026
Genre: Adventure
System: Windows

a woman at a table with a lit cigarette
Screenshot taken from Itch.io

As a longtime (3 years) fan of Wavey Games, I was very excited to see that they just released a new game. The Dissident is a short pay-what-you-want first-person point-and-click adventure game where you must assist someone escaping the authorities by helping her get into her own dreams by fixing and using an altered tape recorder. It’s a very surreal plot and the whole game follows this vibe but not at the expense of the puzzles, which all felt very fair. They were the right level of challenge for this type of game, where I did have to pause and think for a minute but nothing too tough, which I think is good in a game like this where the draw for me is exploring the world. The game’s puzzles also provide a few points where it makes the most sense to map something or write some notes, which I enjoy doing in adventure games.

One thing I really enjoy in the works of Wavey Games is the use of retro aesthetics that people generally don’t think about. Their previous games Melon Head and Celestial Coffee Quest (highly recommend both) both used an EGA-palette and this one has a CGA-palette. Even though I considered the CGA colors to be incredibly ugly at the time when DOS shareware games were coming out, it’s fun seeing it intentionally selected for the look of a game and I think it’s used very well here. Most of the game has a nice jazzy soundtrack too, which all fits in very well with the weird but relaxed mystery vibe the game is going for. It’s just a nice little adventure game that you can play in a sitting so go check it out and then play some of the other adventures by Wavey Games if you like this one.

The Dissident is available on Itch.io for Windows and Mac.

Lady at the Costco Gave Me Her Extra Hot Dog Soda Combo

Developer: Hubol
Year: 2026
Genre: Visual Novel
System: Browser

a hot dog with ketchup, mustard, relish, and onion

Lady at the Costco Gave Me Her Extra Hot Dog Soda Combo is a short browser game about exactly what it says in the title. You fill up your soda and put toppings on your hotdog and enjoy a wonderful song at the end. I don’t believe I’ve played any games by hubol before but I loved this one. The animation is a delight and vaguely reminds me of the squigglevision we used to see in Dr. Katz. Even if you’ve never been to a Costco, I recommend it. Maybe one day we’ll get a sequel about the Costco Chicken Bake.

Lady at the Costco Gave Me Her Extra Hot Dog Soda Combo can be played for free on Itch.io

DOMINO CLUB’s Questions and Answers Jam

Developer: DOMINO CLUB
Year: 2026

walrus judge saying "This is a murder trial. Tell me, what's the victim's name?" with some choices
Pippin Please: Adequate Attorney

Anonymous game collective DOMINO CLUB has published a new set of games for their Questions and Answers jam (or if you’re in the UK, go here). At the moment there are 8 submissions for the theme Questions and Answers in a variety of forms such as visual novels, adventure games, interactive fiction, writing in PDFs, and more. If you follow the blog or me on social media then you’ll know I get excited about the jams because there’s always a few things I fall in love with and I love the experimentation that happens in these jams since they are semi-anonymous. When the games are published, the developer names are not listed however they can reveal themselves at a later date (two weeks later? I forgot).

creepy green guy with giant glasses and red shirt
My guy made with the character creation tool The Killer

These jams happen a few times a year so if you haven’t played any of their games before, consider poking around their Itch.io page, clicking on a jam theme that sounds interesting, and playing a few of the entries. Some of the games are more approachable than others so I recommend trying a few if you haven’t looked before, but I think DOMINO CLUB is doing some of the most interesting work in indie games at the moment and at the very least I think folks interested in experimental games and interactive fiction should give them a look.

End of the Indie Game Roundups….Sorta

Anyway, if you haven’t noticed already, I had stopped posting roundups a while ago and I think I’m deciding to wind those down. I just suddenly lost interest in doing them since they were getting so time consuming and kept putting off doing another one because I didn’t have the enthusiasm to do another big post, which probably means it’s time to slow down on them. What I’m probably going to do instead is just doing individual posts on whatever indie games I’ve been enjoying. It means less games will get mentioned but the ones that do will not get buried in a giant post and will have more to say about them other than “well, this looks neat” so I don’t really think it’s a loss. Anyway, just wanted to give a heads up in case you’re read them and wondered why there’s suddenly more posts about individual games. I think it will work better anyway and it will be more fun for me, which is the whole reason I have a website in the first place.

Frog Detective 1: The Haunted Island thoughts

Developer: Grace Bruxner, Thomas Bowker
Publisher: worm club, SUPERHOT PRESENTS
Year: 2018
Genre: Adventure
System: Mac

a frog saying "do you know anything about that cave?"

Frog Detective 1: The Haunted Island is a short first-person adventure game where you are a detective who is also a frog and need to investigate reports of a ghost haunting the island. My oldest has been playing the series on her own and her younger sister wanted to see them so we just played through the first one together. I’m glad I got to revisit it because I liked it more than I remembered and my daughter loved it. I had always liked the game but I had some small gripes about the game that were much more minor than I remembered.

The gameplay is very simple. You walk around and talk to various characters on the island, asking them about the ghost, other folks, and if they need help with anything. You continue doing this and helping them with their needs and it eventually leads you to the end of the mystery and game. The puzzles are very simple and there’s no fail states, which may frustrate some experienced adventure gamers, but the focus of the game is on the humor and art and I think that makes it a great intro to adventure games for folks. It’s also fun exploring the space that Grace created, which is filled with a lot of fun little details to look at if you aren’t trying to rush through the game.

The gripes that I had with the game before still remain but are much more minor than I remember. The puzzle solving is a bit repetitive since it’s mostly dialog puzzles you solve by going from person to person but again, I think it’s mostly fine since it’s not meant to be a challenging game anyway. The other issue I have is that the humor does start to feel repetitive towards the end as well, but the game is very short (45-60 minutes) that once I had started to feel that way, the game was getting to wrap up anyway. It was also much easier to overlook since I played it with my 6 year old and she was having a great time walking around and talking to everyone. I think playing the game with someone who doesn’t have Gamer Brain really helped me appreciate that it’s a game filled with lovely artwork and that I should just take my time exploring this space instead of viewing it as a series of conversation puzzles to solve.

I have to imagine that anyone who is reading this already knows about the series and has either played it or never will, but maybe this recommendation will slightly nudge you towards checking it out or replaying the game.

Frog Detective 1: The Haunted Island is available for Windows and Mac on Steam and Itch.io, Nintendo Switch, PS4 + PS5, and Xbox.

Have a Small Snapshot of Detroit’s Indie Game Community from 2019

I was looking through the notes app on my mac and just saw this big list of games in one doc. I’m not sure why. Given the amount of student games on here, these may have been notes I took of the indie games conference thing that Lawrence Tech University in Southfield was doing at the time. It was by no means a big event but it’s been 7 years (the notes are from April 21, 2019), so I thought I would dump this all here with any commentary I have, and a games historian can stumble across this in 10 years and pick out the interesting bits. I don’t think this will be of interest to many folks but I think it’s good to have it available anyway. The titles of the games are in bold and my commentary is in unbolded text.

Some of these folks are still making games, some not, and it looks like a few of the students here ended up going into the games industry so that’s lovely to see too. Not going to name them because that feels like doxing to me even if they’re success stories, but I still love to see people doing well.

MageQuit
https://store.steampowered.com/app/572220/MageQuit/

top down view of wizards shooting at each other

MageQuit is a multiplayer game where you duel each other as little wizards. A very fun game. I believe at the time this was in Early Access since the release date on Steam is October. I think it did well judging from the number of Steam reviews and it getting releases on consoles. It’s two brothers who make up the studio, I’m not sure if they’re still in Michigan, and at the time of this writing they’re working on a new game, MageQuit Dungeons.

Golden Treasure
http://www.dreamingdoor.net/

a giant dragon talking to a smaller dragon

Another cool one. They created a visual novel about dragons called Golden Treasure (Steam/Itch.io) that I would recommend. I think there were attempts to make a follow up to this but judging from the last news posting being in 2023, I don’t think this will happen. Hopefully I’m wrong.

Beat Blast
https://bigduke6.itch.io/beatblast

lots of wavy red glowing things heading towards a center

Pretty sure this one was a student game. I know I played it but don’t really remember my feelings on it. But since my memory is a bit crap in general, I don’t think that should reflect on the game. Given that it’s a twin stick shooter and looks nice, I should play it again.

Circular Logic
https://bunsengyro.itch.io/circular-logic

triangle flying in a maze

Another student game. The way I remember the game dev program at Lawrence Tech working is that all the students would split off into groups and make games. From looking at the credits for this one, maybe they could do solo projects as well?

RAD
https://knick-knack-games.itch.io/rad

green guy running through a city

Oh hey, this one is still in development! RAD, which changed its name to RAD-venture after Double Fine’s RAD was announced, is a collect-a-thon. I backed the Kickstarter for this….last year? Maybe the year before? It’s one of those games where it will come out eventually but I haven’t followed it closely enough to know when. But the early builds I’ve played, including the ones from this time seven years ago, have all been great. It doesn’t seem like there’s a demo currently available but you can play the student game version here. The student game version was not through Lawrence Tech.

A Killing in White
https://attemptingent.itch.io/akiw12819

top down view of someone in a house and some rebellious pans saying "is it such a crime to want to be used to make some damn pancakes?"

I remember playing this one! This one was a student game that I remember liking. I haven’t heard from Spencer in a while but I know they made a lot of other lovely games and interactive fiction that you should check out on Itch.

BroBots
https://fuzzistudio.itch.io/brobots

big green guy and a little guy using a giant laser to destroy spiky robots

BroBots! Another one that wasn’t by student, I remember liking this one quite a bit. It’s kind of a twin-stick shooter co-op game. I think the studio planned on doing more but I don’t believe that happened. I do remember it originally being $2, it’s the only game I’ve bought on GameJolt, but at some point they made it pay-what-you-want for everyone to enjoy.

Obelisk
https://amastroi.itch.io/obelisk

top down view of a guy with an afro fighting monsters in a dungeon

A student game doing a Binding of Isaac thing. I think I played this one but have no memories of it or the table.

Astray
https://stavnash.itch.io/astray

top down view of a guy next to a garden

As it says on the page, a student game. This was a short adventure game. All I vaguely remember is enjoying it.

Zicon Zero
https://opsage.itch.io/zicon

space ship in an asteroid field

Oh hey, one I actually remember playing. It’s an arcade space sim that was made by a large-ish team. I still have a little pin from this one. The teams were encouraged to make little things to give away at their table, I assume to give them experience tabling for cons, so I have various stickers and pins from some of these games. Maybe I can update this post later with photos of some of them.

[MEMORY_LEAK]

Had to double check with the dev who was working on this. It’s still alive and in development. It’s a turn based rpg inspired by Paper Mario. All I had in my notes were a twitter link but the dev has moved to Bluesky years ago at this point. No Bluesky account for this game but they do have one for their other game in development, Admit One.

WaveCrash!!
https://flyover-games.itch.io/wavecrash

two people shooting waves of blocks at each other

Oh hey, one I really know. Steven co-founded local indie game collective Locally Sourced with me so yes, I know he’s still around making stuff. WaveCrash!! eventually got a release on Steam if you only want to play games on that platform. He’s currently working on a puzzle game.

Unto the Breach
http://www.templargames.com/

top down view of a guy named conrad in a house saying "That'd be nice. Although...reading about history isn't as good as experiencing it firsthand. If we have the time while we're here, do you think we ccould check out a few places of interest?"

I don’t know if this one is still being actively developed but if you poke around the page you can see the developer has done a bit and I know he’s very active with local Warhammer and other tabletop communities.

Stardust Hyperdrive

top down view of a ship in space shooting at others

This was a top down arcade game for the Android. It doesn’t seem like it’s available anymore which is too bad because I remember liking it. I never had an Android device so I was always hoping it would get ported to other stuff but I don’t think it did. You can already read more about the game on the dev’s site, where it also lists the soundtrack. I also made a MobyGames page for it.

AstroYeet
https://jmarsh411.itch.io/astroyeet

top down view of a ship dodging asteroids and lasers

Hey, I remember this one. It’s a top-down runner-like arcade game where you dodge asteroids and lasers being shot at your ship from the ships chasing you. Josh is still involved with the local game dev scene, I think through IGDA Detroit.

Interstellar Symphony
https://whitestar505.itch.io/interstellar-symphony

two robots dancing on a stage

Another student game, this was a cute arcade dancing game by a team of students. I have a sticker or business card for it somewhere.

Sagebrush
https://store.steampowered.com/app/864100/Sagebrush/

low res house at sunset

Great game (also on Itch) and it eventually led to other projects like Cellular Harvest. Nate now works at New Blood, where he works on games like Gloomwood. This one wasn’t a student project. The showcase/convention also had commercial games and projects by non-students there.

End of the Line
https://beefystar.itch.io/playeotl

I’m not actually sure if this one is still in development, doing game dev as a hobby while also being a parent is tricky, but I really liked what is there. He’s also made other games on his solo Itch page.

There was also a System Shock mod at this thing from a non-student. I’m not sure how that happened but I love it. I tracked down the mod and it’s called Lazarus Decλy. My notes had a link to a Facebook page but that’s no longer active.

a guy on a pirate ship with a cannon firing cannon balls
Student game Misadventure

There’s some others that weren’t in my notes but I found through some digging on Itch. Some more student games at the showcase include:

  • There’s GlowPunk, a student group project game.
  • Misadventure is a short platformer where you are on a pirate ship. I remember it doing some fun physics stuff and the team just being very happy that folks were checking out their game they made.
  • Isa’s Edda is a 3D platformer I know I did not play, but some of the same folks went on to make a first person adventure game Farewell Call that I remember liking.
  • Saviour is a cool one where you are navigating a space in pitch black and relying entirely on sound.
  • Prison of the Damned is a first-person puzzle student game that I remember being at the showcase but did not have time to play.
  • I do remember really liking Crime and Nunishment, a top-down game where you are a nun shooting at nuns. It had a really cool art style that slightly reminds me of the 90s fps ZPC. I have a sticker from their booth.
top down view of a nun shooting a monster
Crime and Nunishment

Another pair of projects that I didn’t have in my notes but suddenly remembered were the pair of first-person vaporwave. My memory is that it started as one but then had creative differences and split off into their own projects. So here are A E S T H E T I S P H E R E and Vaporstride for you to play and enjoy.

Anyway, those are my notes. Like I said, this is probably going to be boring to most folks but I wanted to document it anyway. Feel free to correct me if I’m misremembering this stuff or left any games out. These are my memories of a games event from a long time ago. I just thought it might be good to preserve this stuff somewhere. A long time ago I made this Itch collection of local student games and some of them may have been in this showcase as well.

Indie Game Roundup (March 13, 2026)

It’s Friday the 13th, the most cursed day for indie games. A lot of people are weird about hobbyist game devs and I would just like to say, you all rock and are making some of the best games. Please keep putting cool stuff on Itch.io and elsewhere, and making things with weird little game engines. Here’s some of those games and also some by people that somehow manage to do it full time. It’s going to be a long one since I didn’t do one last week so I’m splitting it into smaller categories. I’ll try to do another one of these posts soon because there’s a bunch I still plan to write about, but just don’t have the time today. If you enjoy these posts, maybe consider playing one of my games. Most of them are free.

Adventure

Choicebeat #16 is the latest issue of the free zine for adventure games, visual novels, and interactive fiction.

collage of photos of someone on a trail

Apologies in advance for this one because I don’t actually know what it is but saw it recommended by folks and it has FMV so this is one where I’m just going to copy the description and you can decide if it’s interesting or not. kevin’s PLAYING in berlin (Steam/Itch.io) is an IGF Nuovo Award finalist consisting of three games. In Ke Vin, evin asked 200+ questions around the Berlin Wall in a language of the body without verbs. The audio was recorded in Kyiv. In What if Ginger is a Religion unlock a brand new language with a unique writing system. You’ve Received XX Messages in a Language Unknown Even to Its Speaker is an emotional ASMR game.

You Are Elon Musk (Twine) is a simulator created in Twine where you play as Elon Musk and see how much you can do for the world with his obscene amounts of wealth. It’s the sequel to You Are Jeff Bezos and even more depressing than that was, but also very funny. It’s got quite a few endings in it and I haven’t even found any secret endings yet.

Back in the Swamp (Steam) is a first-person point-and-click adventure set in a post-apocalyptic swamp. I haven’t played it yet but I like the art and it reminds me of 00’s-era adventure games, which I actually mean here as a compliment. It’s got a demo too.

Game Jams

maze of skulls
Skellywave

The CGA Jam wrapped up on Itch, where folks made games for DOS using the CGA standard. While it was a set of colors people hated at the time, I think it can look really nice at times. There’s 9 brand new DOS games for you to play here.

The Trans Joy Jam (Itch.io) was about creating brighter futures for trans folks

Fake Game Magazine jam (Itch.io) is, as you would expect, a jam where people make free game magazines.

Platformer

person with shotgun shooting at green blob monster

Haunted Lands (Steam) is an EGA-era looking platformer inspired by the classic DOS game Dangerous Dave in the Haunted Mansion and the rest of that trilogy, which was created by some ID Software folks. I was a huge fan of that series and this looks to build on that with even more gore and more playable characters. If you want to get a feel for it, you can try some previous games/prototypes on the Itch page.

a ball of moss climbing up a wall. Bubbles fill the room

Moss Moss (Itch.io) is a nice non-violent metroidvania made in PICO-8 where your goal is to cover every surface in moss and discover secrets. I really liked the mechanic of covering everything in moss to unlock new areas. Playable in the browser.

Return to Dark Castle (Steam) is a rerelease of a game that came out on Mac only about 10-15 years ago, but now for Windows and Linux as well. It’s the sequel to a classic Macintosh game from the 80s, which I used to play the Amiga port of with my dad. I remember it being very hard and from the Steam description, that still seems to be the case.

Puzzle

Swappy (Itch.io) is a demo for a puzzle game made in PICO-8 where you must get each character to their goal and swap characters around to get through obstacles. It’s hard to explain but is easy to pick up if you try out the browser demo. I liked it and hope we get more levels.

RPG

Mowguelike (Itch.io) is a roguelike for browsers where the main mechanic is using your lawnmower to mow grass in every level, as well as using that lawnmower to fight enemies.

top down view of people playing basketball and someone saying "I think, therefore I jam"

Hoop Dungeon (Steam) is a basketball turn-based tactical roguelike game and I think that is a really interesting premise. It’s just entered Early Access and there’s a demo available if you want to try it out. The same developer made Nikhil Murthy’s Syphilisation (Steam), a postcolonial 4X game, and I highly recommend that one to Civilization fans.

TTRPG

places to be is a free (Itch.io) systems neutral location creator zine using a 1d20 and 1d6.

Other Bits

A new indiepocalypse (Itch.io) is here, featuring a collection of experimental indie games. I can highly recommend the fmv typing game how to walk out the door.

Demos

1-bit view of a person in a room with lots of writing on the walls

SALANN (Steam/Itch.io) is a first-person rpg with a nice 1-bit aesthetic where you explore a decaying city.

Wishlist

chicken running from an exploding king crab

I was told about Gonzalo the Chicken – Episode I (Steam), a low poly 3D platformer where you are a chicken and throw your explosive friend at enemies. You can watch the trailer for it here.

Super Robot Survivors (Steam) is a new Survivors-like by the creator of classic games like Halloween Harry and Flight of the Amazon Queen.

That’s it for this week! Hope you found something new to play. Feel free to mention your games to me in the comments/email/DMs if it doesn’t use AI. I also live for comments on what you’ve been playing lately. Have a nice weekend!