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App Escape is a game about tiny problems by Leon Arnott.
Play Online
Why Try It: A cute, comedic game about escaping from inside a smartphone.
Time: Five minutes.
How to Play: Use the arrow keys to move around and try to reach the escape app.
Author’s Notes: "This is somewhat inspired by Terra Tam, with some inspiration from Another World and Lim."
More Info: Leon has made a number of other short games, many of which employ similar kinds of slapstick structures and easy-to-follow rules -- you can find them all at Webbed Space.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Fall onto small platforms without managing to touch any four sides of the screen, which are all deadly. When the timer reaches zero, your gravity will switch. I didn't understand how the scoring worked, so I treated it as a 'survive as long as possible' type deal (you can do that with videogames, you know?).
Tiny Sorceress is a game by Leon Arnott about a minute enchantress seeking to be crowned queen.
Play Online
Why Try It: Cartoon slapstick humour; straightforward, simple rules guiding each scene; unique black and white visual style.
Time: Five minutes.
How to Play: Use the arrow keys to interact with each scene -- most use a very straightforward vocabulary (lifting spikes, cutting a rope, etc.) but even if it takes you a while to figure things out, there's no pressing time constraints to worry about.
Author's Notes: "This was inspired by Terra Tam, Chuck Jones, Spike: A Love Story and, for specific scenes, LIMBO and Trine. The game was made during Ludum Dare #25. It placed #1 for Humour and #17 Overall."
More Info: Leon has made a number of other short games, many of which employ similar kinds of slapstick structures and easy-to-follow rules. If you like Tiny Sorceress, you might also want to try App Escape and Terra Tam: World Warrior. It should also be noted that Leon maintains an incredible twitter account.
Triad is a game by anna anthropy, Leon Arnott, and Liz Ryerson. It consists of a single sliding-block puzzle designed to convey one particular challenge of a triadic relationship: fitting three people into a single bed.
Download (Mac, Windows)
Why Try It: Gets into the day-to-day realities and spatial dynamics of relationships using a simple puzzle metaphor; great minimalistic use of dialogue and character animations; depicts a triadic sexual relationship.
Time: Depending on your puzzle-solving skills, ten to thirty minutes.
How to Play: Use the mouse to drag each of the three people onto spaces in the bed, and click to rotate them. You have to maneuver them around each other, otherwise they'll push the others out of place. Each person has a particular quirk -- one rolls, one kicks, and one snores. Your goal is to make sure everyone gets a good night's rest. Click the lamp once you think you've solved things, and don't worry too much about making mistakes. It'll likely take you several tries, but there are no punishments for failure, so you can move at your own pace and take as much time as you'd like.
Author's Notes & More Info
Author's Notes: "this game began as a conversation with jake eakle about a mutual problem we’ve faced: trying to fit yourself and the two people you’re dating into a bed that’s not designed for three people. in such a way that all three people can actually sleep. my own unhappy solution to the puzzle involved a futon on the floor and one member of our trio having to sleep by herself. it’s not an easy puzzle."
More Info: Many videogames that involve sexual or romantic relationships do so through simulating a conversation, presenting the player with a number of dialogue choices and asking them to engage with a pre-programmed non-player character. Triad is an example of a game that instead deals with the bumping, jostling, and fitting together of bodies in ways that frequently aren't sexy or dramatic but are part of the necessities of daily living. You can read more thoughts on Triad from Aevee Bee.