Glorious colours and messy sketchbooks
Growbot is the first game by illustrator Lisa Evans. A point-and-click adventure about a robot saving her home from a dark crystalline force, Growbot takes the adorable fantasy worlds of Evans’ static art and translates them into a space station you can play with, full of plants and aliens.
“I love creating detailed images, the kind where you can discover little hidden characters and subplots,” says Evans. “Part of the incentive to make a game was to indulge in this by allowing players to click around the images and explore them a lot more deeply.”
Although there’s a shared aesthetic between her illustrations and her game, the move from book spreads to playable spaces meant Evans had to rethink how someone interacts with the scene.
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Denne historien er fra February 2018-utgaven av PC Gamer.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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A New Dawn - The rise, fall and rise again of PC Gaming in Japan
The so-called 'Paso Kon' market (ie katakana's transliteration of 'Pasonaru Computa') in Japan was originally spearheaded in the 1980s by NEC's PC-8800 and, later, its PC-9800.
MARVEL: ULTIMATE ALLIANCE
Enter the multiverse of modness.
SLIDES RULE
Redeeming a hated puzzle mechanic with SLIDER
GODS AND MONSTERS
AGE OF MYTHOLOGY: RETOLD modernises a classic RTS with care
PHANTOM BLADE ZERO
Less Sekiro, more Wo Long: Fallen Dynasty
STARR-MAKING ROLE
Final Fantasy XVI's BEN STARR talks becoming a meme and dating summons
THIEF GOLD
Learning to forgive myself for knocking out every single guard.
HANDHELD GAMING PCs
In lieu of more powerful processors, handhelds are getting weirder
FAR FAR AWAY
STAR WARS OUTLAWS succeeds at the little things, but not much else shines
FINDING IMMORTALITY
Twenty-five years on, PLANESCAPE: TORMENT is still one of the most talked-about RPGs of all time. This is the story of how it was created as a ‘stay-busy’ project by a small team at Black Isle Studios