First Impression: Cult of the Lamb (Switch) ~ Praise The Lamb, Thy Lamb.

Official micrositeOfficial websiteNintendo.com micrositeWikipedia page

I enjoy playing unique games quite a lot. When I came across Cult of the Lamb on the Nintendo Switch eShop, I was interested. I marked the game on my wishlist, so I could find it back when I was hunting for new games. A few weeks ago, I went on a family trip and I wanted a fresh new game to play. Cult of the Lamb was on sale together with all its DLC, and I thought: “Let’s buy this and see what happens.” Now, when I started playing this game… I had some expectations, but I got something completely different. Did this game turn into a game I really like and drew me in, or did this game turn into something I regretted buying? In this article, I want to talk about my opinions on the game, while I invite you to leave a comment in the comment section down below with your thoughts and/or opinions on the game and/or the content of this article. So, let’s dive right into this game and let’s create our very own cult.

Cute horror

When I started playing this game, my younger 8-year-old niece who sat next to me was saying: “Aren’t you getting too old to play this children game?”. Oh boy, don’t let the cute characters of this game fool you. I’ll talk more about the visuals later, but the story is anything but child-friendly.

You play as an unnamed lamb being sacrificed to avoid a prophecy of getting fulfilled. Yet, during your execution, you get sent to “The One Who Waits”. He wants you to make a cult in his honor without giving you any say in the matter. You get reborn with new powers so you can take revenge on the old Gods that executed you. Now tell me, this sounds like this game isn’t too child-friendly anymore, no?

There is not a lot of voice acting in this game besides your usual grunts and babble. A lot happens in text dialogue and the writing is excellent. Since the Gods that executed you are from the “Old Faith”, the writing of some characters is also sometimes in that old English style, and I love it.

If I’m really honest, the story overall isn’t the strongest point of this game. While it’s decent, it’s a bit predictable and an amazing way to set the atmosphere of the game. But, I feel that it stays too safe at certain moments. I noticed moments of expanding the lore and fleshing everything out, but sometimes these moments fly underneath the radar. Especially since some story bits happen during a hectic run and your mind is set on something very different.

If you want to enjoy the story of this game, I’d recommend that you take note of what the characters during your runs are saying instead of mashing through it. I made that mistake a few too many times, and I feel like I’m missing some lore here and there. Sadly enough, there is no “lore book” or history page you can look up things.

Now, thankfully, this game is still quite strong if you don’t pay too much attention to the story. There are various lore video’s out there if you want to relive the story. To me, the story in this game is more something to help set the tone of the games’ world and give it that unnerving layer underneath its cute and charming vibe that the game is giving off.

Stark contrast

This game consists out of two main gameplay mechanics. You have your base building, and you have the rouge lite dungeon crawling “conquests”. Both are quite important, since both mechanics lien on each other in very interesting ways.

If you have played a game like Rogue Legacy or We Who Are About To Die, you know that in those games you explore a randomly generated dungeon or fight random fights. In between the fights, you are in your base camp, where you can buy upgrades to improve your next chances in your next run. Well, in this game, that base camp is expanded into a town simulator. You have to care for your flock by cooking them food, providing them shelter, curing them when they are sick, going on various mini-quests for them… If you are a good caretaker, your flock generates devotion, which you can use to upgrade your base and your abilities in your run. When you are a bad caretaker, they will die and/or even steal from you and leave the cult.

It’s quite important to know that your cult doesn’t sleep or get inactive when you are conquesting. As soon as you go out for one of the four dungeons, your cult goes through their daily routine and things can go quite wrong.

Now, in theory, you can never go conquesting and only focus on the base building alone. Then, you still have an amazing game to play, but let me tell you, you do lose out on quite a lot of the game. Also, some things become quite impossible to do, and you are sort of forced into going into the dungeon. Now, the punishment for death or escaping the dungeon isn’t that hard, depending on your difficulty settings.

Speaking about those, if you put this game on easy… This game is a cakewalk. You can change the difficulty setting quite easily, but the dungeon becomes a bit boring if you play it on easy. The normal setting is quite balanced and provided me with a lot of challenge. There is no punishment for playing on easy or switching, so if you want to lower or higher the difficulty setting, go ahead.

While the base building has a rather creepy-cute ascetic like a children horror movie, the light gore elements come more into play during the conquesting sections. Overall, the game is rather tame with its gore, but if you start reading into the story and the visuals a bit more, things can become quite creepy indeed. Also, depending on the choices you make when you upgrade your cult. Depending on those decisions, you can make the game more “creepy” or more “charming”.

Now, let’s talk a bit more in depth about the conquests you can go on. At first, you can only access the Dark Woods dungeon. The more followers you have in your flock, the more dungeons you can unlock. Each dungeon has its own theme and unique resources you can find in there. Sadly, it’s not always clear which resources are found where, so mental notes can be quite handy. At one hand, the buildings you can create in your base sometimes give very good hints. Since, they are separated into categories and their materials are sometimes the best hint.

During each conquest, you go through small maps where you go from room to room fighting enemies. At the start of the conquest, you get a random weapon and a random second attack. We get a whole range of weapons like knives, swords, axes and hammers. They are also in various categories like vamperic or toxic. This first roll decides quite a lot. The weapon I hated the most is the hammer, since it’s quite slow, and it only damages when the hammer has landed. Not something you need in a fast-paced combat system.

Overall, the enemies telegraph their attacks quite well. Only when they go off-screen and flew in suddenly, I felt that the game cheated me. Thankfully, this happens so infrequently, I’m not even seeing it as a problem. The combat in this game is quite fast-paced. Standing still and not using your dodge roll are two death sentences in this game. The difficulty curve in this game is amazing for the combat. They slowly introduce the new mechanics, and you have time to get used to them. While the game can be unforgiving with barely dropping any healing items, you need to get lucky. But, learning the combat system is essential.

You can also find tarot cards, here you have another random roll. Most of these cards give you a nice buff or change up a game mechanic. Like, there is a tarot card that changes the reward chest of beating a room from gold coins to fish, which gives you more food to feed your flock. These draws are always random and can safe or break a run.

Now, after a certain amount of rooms, you go to the exit of the map. Then you come across a diagram towards the boss room. You have to decide which path to take. Now, you need to decide this carefully. Since, you can go back, and you only follow the lines drawn on the diagram. So, if you are going for a new follower run, take that path. But, do keep your resources into consideration. If you see food, stone or wood in that other path, and you really need that, do consider that path too.

There are also relics, in most cases these relics are sort of “screen nukes” basically. They either apply an effect to all enemies in the room or on screen, give you a really strong temporary buff, or just kill all enemies. Sometimes these relics are a one time use, and sometimes you need them to recharge by either having your flock pray for you or defeat more enemies.

Now, the amount of control you have over your character is perfect. The controls are extremely responsive and makes me feel in control while I’m going through my conquest. Even when I take a short break from the game, it’s not hard to figure out the controls again, since the first room is always a safe room. Or I could try them out in these special rooms where a character talks a bit about the lore, or where I can draw a new tarot card or in very rare cases even heal.

At the end of each conquest tree, you will encounter a boss room. That’s your destination. Defeating that boss guarantees you a safe return without loosing any resources you gained from that run. These boss battles are quite a lot of fun to play. They are always different depending on your weapon, your secondary attack, your tarot cards… Defeating three bosses in the dungeon will cause the old God of that area to challenge you. When you defeat all four of these old Gods, you will be able to go to the final boss. But, even if you have defeated the old God of an area, you can still go and run their dungeon. And if you then destroy a devotion statue, there is a big chance a red portal will spawn to refight them, giving you an option for a quick escape if you have a terrible map.

Praising how close we were

Now, in the previous section I have talked quite in depth about the conquest mechanic in this game. Let’s now focus our attention to the village building and the other mechanics of this game.

Like I talked about earlier, visually this game looks quite charming. Even in the dungeons, this game looks quite charming if you don’t think too much about what’s actually going on. The game looks cartoony and quite colorful and lures you in with it’s adorable charm to sometimes slap you with a villager request of being scarficed themselves.

Building out your village is quite a lot of fun. You really have to decide to use your resources well, since some buildings can be quite important and even optimize the game for you. For most tasks, there is no way to automate them apart from a very select few.

For example, if you build a morgue, your flock will bring dead villagers to it instead of letting them rot in your base camp. But burrying your death villagers is still a task you need to do and the morgue has only so many slots. Another great example is, you can appoint villagers to tend to the farms. They will plant, water and put fertilizer but actually picking the crops is on you. Update: I turns out I am wrong, I thought I built farm houses level 2, but mine are level 1. The level 2 farm houses do also gathering of crops. Now, the supplying of seeds and fretiziler is still on you.

And the final example I’ll give is, you can build a villager kitchen and they will cook every meal you provide the ingredients for. If you are out of ingredients you have put in, for max of 30 pending meals, you will have to resupply it.

Wood and stone quarries will break after a certain amount of time, so you will have to rebuild them. Also, when you want to upgrade some buildings to their best form, you will have to build their weaker form first. The base building is quite in depth. And on top of that, several important things to keep high. First of all, we need to keep the belief in the cult high. The lower that belief goes, the higher the chance you have of deserters. And the more deserters you have, the slower you can upgrade your abilities for the conquests and let me tell you, you need those upgrades for sure. Besides that, you have hygiene and food to worry about. The lower those meters are, the more chance you have of your villagers getting sick and risking death.

While you are playing this game, I’m going to give you one piece of advice for the base building. Something that’s quite overpowered is the fact you can inspire your villagers every day. This always garantuees devotion and makes sure you level up your villagers and makes sure you unlock the needed items for those upgrades. That way you don’t have the risk using certain rituals to lift the belief up. And why not risking these rituals, well let’s just say that villager requests are timed and they are sometimes shorter than the cooldown time of the ritual.

The day and night cycle of this game is quite important as well. Let your villagers sleep during the nighttime. Also, use the nighttime to your advantage. Critters are running around that might give you that additional piece of food you really need if you catch them. Also, you can go to other places to play mini-games or do additional side quests for more decorations for your base. Besides looking extremely well, these decorations have no real impact to the game.

Something that can have a very minor impact to your game is the form you choose of your followers. Since some types of animals have a pet option that rises their experiece/devotion meter by a really small bit. Experiment with all the different forms since I’m convinced that there are other things that I have missed in there. Their designs are also adorable and charming. Also, you can create some funny looking villagers as well with certain colorschemes.

Now, the music and sound effects in this game are amazing. The soundtrack of this game is calming when it needs to be, but rather intense during fights. Since I started playing this game, I can’t tell you how many times I listened to the soundtrack during work. The soundtrack is created by River Boy and let me tell you again, it’s amazing music in game and outside of it as well.

The sound effects in this game really communicate to the player when for example an attack is happening or a certain action finished. The sound effects feel like they have impact and are really memorable. I have no complaints there at all.

The pacing of this game is something you decide yourself. While this game can be beaten in 14 hours or so, I have been playing this game for way longer than 14 hours. I’m enjoying myself so much with this game, I’m really taking my time with it and going at it slowly. And it’s something that I also love about this game. There is no rush looming over us.

Sadly, while I have been mostly praising the game, I’m said to say that there are some issues as well. Mainly in the base building. These issues mostly come from some nasty bugs that can hinder the experience. Most of these bugs I have experienced where in the base. Thankfully, it’s not always a guarantee these bugs will appear for everyone… and sometimes they fix themselves thankfully.

The first one I expierenced is that sometimes the game has very bad slowdown for just a moment. Especially when we go from night to day. I have a theory why this is, since I didn’t notice this while I’m conquesting. My gut feeling is telling me that when you are in the camp, too many things need to be updated like the crop cycle, waking up the villagers, re-enabling events that you can do only once per day, remove the nighttime critters… And that’s a bit too much for the Switch to handle. I notice that it’s especially bad when I’m at my farms since it needs to redraw all the crops.

The second one I experienced is that the game crashed on me trice. Thankfully, when I moved the game from the SD card to my internal storage, the crashes went away. Now, it’s quite rare for games to crash on me on the Nintendo Switch, but still… Thankfully, the autosave is very generous and you won’t loose too much progress when the game crashes. And if it were to crash in a dungeon run (which I never had happen by the way), those are always around 10 – 15 minutes long in the first place.

Another one I experienced is the infamous morgue glitch. For some reason, it’s possible that when somebody dies in your flock and the villagers bring that body to the morgue, you’ll be unable to pick it out of the morgue. The issue here is that this “ghost body” is permanent and occupying a slot in the morgue. Sadly enough, I have two of these ghost bodies. Meaning, when I get a 3rd, my morgue is filled and I get a permanent hygiene penalty.

In very rare cases, I saw how the game was optimized for Switch. When villagers are off screen, they loose all their animation. Sadly, in very rare cases you can still see it at the edges of your screen and it’s looks quite funny. Another very rare case as well are the glitches where you can’t cut a tree in your base. You somewhat get stuck into the animation. Thankfully, mashing buttons gets you out of that.

But one of the most annoying bugs/things in this game to me is how unrealible the mission length is. You can send a follower on a mission to get new followers or resources. Now here is the thing, they say it will take X amount of days or time for them to get back. Sadly, this is anything but a guarantee. It’s even possible that it takes them two or even three days longer for you to return.

Now, apart from the morgue glitch, all the bugs I experienced you can work around. Thankfully, they don’t appear too often so you don’t feel like this game is unpolished. Since this game has quite a lot of polish and it shows. Since, apart from these bugs, I really have a hard time finding negative things to talk about in this game and if I find them, they are somewhat nitpicky as well.

Things that I found annoying or negative in this game are for example, there is no way to fully harvest all your crops in one go. If there is one, I haven’t found it and it’s not clearly explained to the player. But, it’s a nice and relaxing night time activity so, I don’t mind it too much.

Another example is when somebody dies at day time, it’s always a pain to prepare the body when it’s in a group of grieving followers. The issue here is that they barf on the ground, giving your hygiene a big hit. But, they disperse quite quickly so you can move the body after that.

Sometimes, when a lot of things are near to each other, some hitboxes can be really finicky. You’ll need to stand in the exact spot and face the exact angle for it to register or count. Also, why can you not gather the devotion of shelter when a villager is sleeping in it? You only get the option to talk to that villager.

Like I said, apart from some bugs, the negatives are quite minor in the grand scheme of things in this game. Since this game is filled with strenghts and it shows. Like how easy the UI is to navigate and how many options you get to tweak this game to your liking.

It’s no wonder that I have been playing this game almost exclusively since I bought it late last month. I can recommend this game to everybody who enjoys rougelike games, action/adventure games and to a certain extend even horror game fans. This game really hooked me quite bad and I’m loving the ride. This game is addictive. This game lures you in with it’s cute and charming atmosphere but will sometimes remind you that it might be a wolf in sheep clothing and show it’s true cult colors.

While I can totally understand that some people expected more about this game, is just another thing about this game. It shows the potential this game, this formula has. I’m hoping we are going to see a sequel or even a DLC that adds new mechanics since I’m over half way in beating this game and I’m convinced that after beating this game, I’ll still be hungry for more Cult of the Lamb content. Maybe I’ll even try a run on the hardest difficulty… Since the replay value of this game is out of the roof. Or I might turn into a base building player and use the excellent photography mode… Who knows?

And with that said, I have said everything about this game I want to say for now. I want to thank you so much for reading this article and I hope you enjoyed reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it. I hope to be able to welcome you in another article but until then, have a great rest of your day and take care.

Android Games – Let’s start playing on my phone again.

It has been quite some time since I wrote an article with short reviews of Android games, has it not? Lately, I have been focussing on the bigger games and I haven’t given the smaller games some time to shine on my blog. Also, when I was talking about a smaller game, I wrote a longer article on it instead of a short review. But, since I’m currently working on bigger articles and I didn’t want to skip this week, I decided I wanted to bring this series back and start talking about a few smaller games I have been playing on my phone lately. So, let’s start talking about smaller Android games and let’s take a quick look if they are worth your time/money. Also, feel free to leave a comment in the comment section with your thoughts and opinions on the games and/or the content of this article.

ProgressBar95

Steam versionAndroid version

For those who don’t know, I’m 28 years old, and I also have a day job. This day job is being an IT admin in a big art secondary school (high school for some) here in Belgium. My work days are filled with solving problems that teachers and students have, improving our IT infrastructure, developing our website… Apart from that, I’m also a big fan of old tech and I love messing around with old computers and technology.

So, when I came across ProgressBar95 on the app store, I downloaded the game right away. And I fell in love with it right away. The game keeps true to its tagline that this game is a “hypercasual UI game”. The main idea of this game is that you are a progress bar that needs to catch dropping squares to make the progress bar progress. Blue and light blue are good ones, orange are errors but still help you in progress. Pink detracts from your progress bar, so you can get rid of orange squares if you want.

Depending on how well you do, the amount of points you get to unlock various upgrades to your computer. The higher your level, the more difficult this game becomes and the more points you can earn. This game also works with lives, but if you run out of lives, you don’t have to wait a certain amount of time for them to recharge and try the game again.

So, the interface of this game is top-notch. It nails the ascetic of being a computer amazingly. For example, to toggle sound on or off, you can press the sound icon in the bottom right of the computer. If you click the “EN” of the language toolbar, you can switch languages. It also has a colorblind mode, cloud saving, multiple game modes and one of the best ways to handle microtransactions I have seen.

The different gameplay modes I have played so far is a sort infinite runner Wolfenstein game and a “dodge the red numbers and get to the bottom of an Excel spreadsheet”-game. They add so much variety to the game and I love going between them if I’m bored with one game mode.

The biggest recommendation I would give to you is that you buy the extremely cheap “no-ads” package. Overall, the ads aren’t annoying but the game improves so much without forced ads. Now, if you look at the whole shop, you might think that this game is a “pay-to-win” or a money sink. But, no. You can pay to unlock all other levels but 99% of the stuff in the store can be earned easily in-game by winning levels or doing side quests.

It’s clear that this game has a lot of love put into it and I have a hard time finding anything negative about this game. Apart from this game being extremely niche and the game being a little boring for extend playthroughs… But yeah, I honestly would recommend this game to all my other retro gamers or people who are into computer science. It’s an amazing and refreshing experience.

Score: 5/5.

Word Lanes

Android store

So, when I’m in a waiting room or have some time to kill, I love playing small games. Especially when they are puzzle games like word searches or connect the dots to give two examples.

In Word Lanes, you are presented with a grid of letters, and you have to find all the words that fit the clues at the top. Each letter can only be used once and the letters have to connect horizontally or vertically to be used in a word.

This game is rather relaxing, and it’s a great way for me to unwind. I also love how the game is fully translated into my native language. The only complaint I have about that is the fact that as a Belgian person, I always have to struggle when the hint is talking about something from the Netherlands. But, I always report them with a handy report feature after you solved a clue. With this report feature you can report typo’s, wrong clues and things like that.

I’m also on the fence about the microtransactions. You earn coins to use the hint features after beating a level, but I feel I always don’t have enough. Thankfully, you have these daily rewards and saving them up is easy then. Honestly, I just think that the prices of the power-ups are a tad bit too high.

But hey, that’s a minor complaint. Since this game has so much enjoyment to offer and the ads aren’t THAT intrusive and only play between levels. Also, quite frequently, I have an option where the ads are disabled for one day. This is amazing and actually makes me consider buying the “no ads” package since I got a free trial.

Score: 4/5

Reigns

Android store

Way back in 2017, I wrote an article about Questr. A game that has some “Tinder” style gameplay while being a questing game. Now, that game was more about adventuring while you created your party with a sort of Tinder app. In this game, the main feature of Tinder of swiping left to reject or right to approve, is set into a “choose your own adventure” game.

Reigns is published by DeveloperDigital and is so close to be amazing, it’s painful. The gameplay is quite addictive, and I love taking decisions as an immortal king on how my kingdom should progress. The atmosphere, sound effects, music and visual design is amazing. It really pulls you into the game and I love playing the game but…

It’s way too easy to take a decision. It’s too sensitive. I had several moments where I was choosing between two options and just because I hit the edge of one side a bit too much, the game decided for me. And not only that, my phone doesn’t have physical buttons anymore and quite often, I had the game deciding for me just because I swiped down to see the time or see my latest notification.

There is also no “message log”. So, when you put the game down for a moment, you can’t see the history of what happened. And if I want to change the options during gameplay, though luck. The menu only appears when see the progress between kings.

This game has a lot of amazing elements like having to balance your four powers and the various twists and turns certain decisions and pathways can take, but it has various rough edges, I fell so mixed about this game. Maybe the PC version of the game is better, but I feel like this game works best as a mobile game. But, I feel like the mobile version just got a few rough edges. For example, I had to look up a way to reset your progress in the game. It turns out you have to hold two fingers on to have the reset screen to show up.

Yet, I advise people who enjoy adventure games to give this game a go. But be warned, the mobile version has some rough edges. But, for the low asking price of this game and the amount of content in this game, I can say for a fact there is a LOT worse out there. And I’m also so glad that this amazing concept got a few sequels as well… So, I know what to play next on my phone.

Score: 3.5/5

Wrapping up

I’m so glad that I gave this format another go and revived it. It allowed me to talk about three Android games I wanted to showcase on my blog, but I didn’t have the time for or wasn’t able to write a good enough “long” article about. I think I’ll revisit this format more often in the future and maybe also use it when I play small games on Steam, Switch or other platforms.

Then again, with my busy lifestyle and the backlog of games I still want to cover, I can’t promise how frequent I’ll write articles like these. I also challenged myself to be brief and short in this article and I had the urge to keep writing about these three games. So, if you want a more in-depth article about one of these games, let me know in the comments.

So, with that said, I want to thank you for reading this article and I hope you enjoyed reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it. I hope to be able to welcome you in a future article but until then, have a great rest of your day and take care!

Preview: The Uncharted Roads of Marco Polo (PC) ~ The Road To Development

4 (1)[15753]Today I have something quick unique to present to you. Not too long ago, I met somebody on a Facebook group about point-and-click adventure games who was developing a new title. The game is called ”The Uncharted Roads of Marco Polo” and it looks extremely interesting to me. I suggested creating an article for the developers and they agreed. So, here we are. I’m writing a preview article for a game that only released some screenshots and a small trailer video. But there is more! I had the chance to talk to one of the developers of this game called Josip Makjanic and we are going to talk about the uncharted road that took him to this development. So, with that said, it’s time to dive into this article and invite you to leave a comment in the comment section with your opinion on the game and/or the content of this article.

 The pitch

So, what is this game about? The developer provided me with a bit more information about the game. Basically, the game is a point-and-click adventure game like Broken Sword and Monkey Island. You can also compare it to Captain Disaster, Another Code R, Time Hollow, Ace Attorney, Professor Layton or the CSI games.

The game takes the player all over various landmarks in Croatia to solve puzzles and have a grand adventure. The story will be based on historic locations and figures. At this moment, the game is in its pre-alpha stage and has over 60 locations planned together with various characters to populate them. The puzzles will be in the style you would find in the Broken Sword or the Monkey Island series.

Pre-Alpha means that the game is in a sort “draft” phase. It means that everything is being prepared to go into the production of the game. Compare it to baking a cake, the moment you plan to bake a cake and make a list of which ingredients you will need and for whom you are making the cake… Those are things you would do in the pre-alpha stage of development. You can read more information about the development cycle on this Wikipedia article.

Personally, I love games that take place in unusual locations around the world. So, this game takes place in Croatia and is being developed by Svarog Interactive. This 4-man team is also based in Croatia. Now, the guys from there also send us a little teaser video that you can find right here:

I have to say, this teaser is extremely impressive. Right away, I noticed that the art style resembled the art style in the first Broken Sword games. Like the Broken Sword games, the locations are extremely detailed and colorful. Unlike the Broken Sword games, the animation like the leaves and the flies on screen… Well, the location feels more alive than ever. I find it rather enjoyable that everything looks quite realistic and those flies, man, they look so goofy I love it.

If you compare the Pre-Alpha video to the screenshots I shared on top of this article, you notice some big differences right away. First of all, the dialogue system looks a lot cleaner. You get dialogue boxes with character portraits on top. Also, you notice that on the bottom right corner, you have a bag. Most likely, this is where your items are going to be stored. So, you won’t have to go to the top of your screen for that. In addition to that, in the right upper corner, you notice that there is a gear icon. This will most likely be a way to go to the pause menu.

Early EnvironmentsSadly enough, since this game is still in extremely early development, there is nothing more I can show you or talk about. I can’t wait to see more and I’m going to follow the development of this game quite closely.

Yet, if you want more and you speak Croatian, you can read this article with one of the developers by 24Sata. Now, there is also this YouTube video where the developer talks about his road towards development. While the video is in Croatian, there are English subtitles provided. Sadly, the subtitles just stop around the 5:11 mark, so there are 2 minutes without subtitles ☹.

Now, before we continue with the interview with Josip Makjanic, one of the co-founders of Svarog Interactive, I want to share some links where you can follow the project as well. They have a Facebook page and Twitter page.

Oliver, Alice & Evil Seagul

Let’s talk

Jonez: Welcome Josip Makjanic, co-founder of Svarog Interactive. Can you give us a small introduction about yourself?

Josip: Hello Jonez. My name is Josip Makjanic, a co-founder and Game Designer in Svarog Interactive.

Jonez: In our conversation over mail you told me that this isn’t your first game. You worked on impressive games like Serious Sam 4 and Serious Sam VR: The Last Hope. Serious Sam is an amazing series from Croatia, your home country. Was it always your dream to develop games?

Josip: Yes. I was always fascinated by it. I started making video games not so long ago, but I sort of designed games in general since I was a kid, by designing them on paper, writing stories and creating concepts. When I lived in a high school dorm I used to make versions of Warcraft, Diablo and even Counter Strike on paper that we played with dice, and people from the dorm would come and play in our room.

I was always fascinated by it and loved creating, so today, with some experience behind and with some good friends by my side, I thought it’s time to start working on our own video games.

Jonez: On the road to the developping of “The Uncharted Road of Marco Polo”, you created two other games called “Day in Dementia” and “In Memory”. Both games have a similar concept and art style. As a side note, I have to say that I’m touched by “In Memory”. The story behind it, a game to honor the dead of your mother, I have one word for you: respect. Respect man. Now, I noticed that both games were created in Construct. Are you using the same engine for this game?

Josip: Thank you. 🙂 Both of these games were made in Construct 2, and were created as a personal project. I don’t even know if I could call them games, but rather some sort of experiences that meant a lot to me personally. Marco Polo is being developed in Unity since it gives us more freedom from the technical sides of things.

Jonez: In our conversation, you talk about an open-world RPG. So, this point-and-click game isn’t the only title you are working on? What is this open-world RPG game or is it more a testing ground for possible future titles?

Josip: We are huge fans of Point & Click games and huge fans of RPG’s. We grew up on those games and always wanted to make our own worlds that others can enjoy with us. So, we are working on an open-world RPG system and have stories and concepts, but, we don’t like to rush ourselves, as we know how ambitious and big these projects are, and we would, of course, need a much bigger team. So before it happens, and we hope it will, there are other, smaller projects in mind, but we are going in that direction.

It’s very important for us to first understand how everything works and make many tests so we don’t waste time or get lost in the projects we’re developing, which makes the development much more enjoyable and better organized. So yes, we are making tests and preparations for other projects, but Marco Polo is a priority and is written as a trilogy. We are also huge fans of traditional drawing and animations, so I don’t think we will ever want to part with it. 🙂

Jonez: Now, let’s get back to The Uncharted Road of Marco Polo since that’s the game that I’m previewing with this article. I’m rather curious. Why about Marco Polo? If the game is set in Croatia and Marco Polo is a merchant from Italy. Of course, there is this debate about his birthplace might be Croatian as well… So, why the decision for Marco Polo?

Josip: The game is talking about historic figures and real places, and players will learn so much about Croatia from it, and while the game has many real things people can learn about, it’s story is fictional and we won’t get involved into that debate, but will rather focus on some other, more interesting aspects based on his life, and how to make an enjoyable story and experience in general. 🙂

Jonez: Are you developing this game full-time or are you developing this game on the side like the Corpse Party developers GrisGris? Also, how do you make sure that there is enough budget to create this game?

Josip: We are currently working in our free time, so that means that we also have other jobs, doing freelancing and helping each other out, but we believe that soon we’ll be able to work full time on the game, and when that happens, we will inform everyone about it. If we don’t get a publisher then we will definitely go Kickstarter with playable Demo, Trailer and some other interesting things in mind. So the game’s development is currently going smoothly without too many investments, but we will definitely depend on a publisher or Kickstarter later if we want to finish the game in a reasonable time.

We also don’t want to go on Kickstarter without having some quality content that people can enjoy before considering supporting us. 🙂

Jonez: You told me that there are, including you, 4 people working on this game. Can you tell us a bit more about the team and the talent in it?

Josip: Yes, there are 4 of us and we all have some projects behind us. There is Alen, our technical guy who makes sure all the systems work in general. Devis is our character artist and animator, and Andrija is our manager. I make backgrounds, write a story and making a game design in general, but we are all highly involved in each part of the development so there is a bit of everyone in every aspect of the game. Andrija, for example, came up with the idea of Marco Polo, so we all worked together to make a story that will fit the game’s mechanics.

There will be behind the scenes when it comes out. 🙂

Jonez: And as a final question, I would like to ask what are your favorite parts of being a game developer and what do you dislike in being a game developer.

Josip: I like how rewarding it can be. It sure isn’t easy to make a game and that’s why I started with those small ones. To build strong foundations and to be able to better understand it and move on to bigger projects. 

And the better I understand it and the more I know about the technical side, the more I can enjoy the creative parts of it, so I guess after every day of work you get rewarded with new knowledge and skills, and I find it very enjoyable.

The bad part of the development would definitely be one issue in the industry in general, and that’s the crunch. I’m not talking about a month or two of crunching, but about the developers who crunch for 6 months or more.

It’s not healthy and I believe that the health of those developers should be in the first place and by organizing yourself better before getting into developing a certain project would save many from that.

It’s a huge problem and something we want to avoid and not be a part of, so that’s one of the reasons for our long preparations and organization before the project even starts. I maybe went a bit off-topic with it, but I believe it’s very important to talk about it

Jonez: And with that, thank you Josip for the interview and the answers! Thank you for answering my silly questions and talking about games and development. I enjoyed it quite a lot.

Josip: Here’s a few words for the gamers out there. It is a huge compliment for us to be compared to a classic such as Broken Sword, as we saw many of you talk about it, and we are happy that you love what you see at this stage of development. It will maybe remind you of it, as we see it already do but I just want to say that we don’t want to be another Broken Sword in the end, as Broken Sword is a timeless classic and we don’t want to compete with it, nor I believe we can.

But what I believe is that we can make an enjoyable experience that will make your time worth playing it, a game on its own that we would like to play too, and that’s what we hope to achieve.

We want to make games like they used to be, or at least, make them feel like they used to be, and even though we are not the most experienced studio in the industry, we will give our best to make them worth your time, and try to be better with each one.

Thank you. 🙂

Jonez: And as a closing note, you can follow Josip’s personal projects over at his CrobbitArts Facebook page!

Ending of the article

And with that, I have to call this article a wrap. I want to thank Josip Makjanic for the interview and the material he provided for me to write this article. I’m quite hyped for this game and I can’t wait to play a demo or see more. Yes, I have quite the weak spot when it comes to well-crafted point-and-click adventure games. I love them more when there is a certain charm to it, like with this game.

This game looks to have quite some potential. Currently, we got only some screenshots and a teaser video and it’s already looking quite amazing. So, here is to Svarog Interactive, keep up the good work you guys! You can do it!

So, I’m curious. Do you think that this game is as interesting as I think? Have you noticed something I overlooked? Tell me in the comment section down below. And with that said, I want to thank you for reading this article and I hope you enjoyed reading this article as much as I enjoyed writing it. I hope to be able to welcome you in another article but until then, have a great rest of your day and take care!