Software:Lost Ember

From HandWiki
Short description: 2019 video game
Lost Ember
Lost Ember cover art.jpg
Developer(s)Mooneye Studios
Publisher(s)Mooneye Studios
EngineUnreal Engine 4[1]
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
ReleasePlayStation 4, Xbox One, Windows
  • WW: November 22, 2019
Nintendo Switch
  • WW: September 24, 2020
Genre(s)Adventure game
Mode(s)Single-player

Lost Ember is an adventure game developed by Mooneye Studios and released in 2019. Players explore the ruins of a lost civilization by possessing various animals.

Gameplay

Lost Ember is a third-person adventure game.[2] Players control an amnesiac wolf. A spirit asks the player for help in reaching the afterlife and explains that people disqualified from entering the afterlife are reincarnated as animals. The player and the spirit set off to find out why the player is barred from the afterlife and to assist the spirit. The game does not have traditional puzzles, though players may encounter impassable terrain. To continue, players can possess other animals they encounter. Possessing a bird allows players to fly over terrain inaccessible to the wolf, and fish can swim across lakes. By exploring nearby ruins, the player and spirit learn more about their past lives and the civilization they came from. Unlocking these memories allows them to progress through the game and enter the afterlife.[3]

Development

Mooneye Studios successfully crowdfunded Lost Ember in 2016. It was released in late 2019 for Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One.[4] It was ported to Nintendo Switch in September 2020.[5]

Reception

Luke Kemp of PC Gamer rated the game 90/100 and called it "a wonderful, unique, and unforgettable experience with a love for nature".[3] Richard Hoover reviewed the game for Adventure Gamers and rated it 3/5 stars. He wrote, "Lost Ember's animal body possession provides some fun moments but the lack of anything substantive to do with it makes for a beautiful but surprisingly empty experience."[2] Reviewing the PlayStation 4 version, Jon Bailes of Polygon criticized the game's performance. Although he said Lost Ember becomes more enjoyable later on, Bailes compared it negatively to Journey and said that Lost Ember "takes way too long to get flowing properly".[6] Brett Posner-Ferdman, who reviewed the Nintendo Switch version for Nintendo Life, also criticized the game's performance. He rated it 4/10 stars and wrote that the game "fails to deliver on nearly every front".[5]

References

External links