top ten games of 2016

it's new year's eve, here are the games i played and loved in 2016

Firewatch, PS4

I put the winter duvet back into the duvet cover on my bed. It was too warm in summer, even the light sheet. With each button, I thought about how drastically different I am as a person from the one who took the duvet out.

Quadrilateral Cowboy, PC

I drew a series of different objects onto pieces of cardboard, and shuffled the deck. My friends took cards from the deck and divined their futures as they saw fit.

Viridi, iOS

I remember inching across the Potomac River as children after it had iced over, when Steven Herren threw a tantrum, and his foot fell through the ice. We had to make a chain with our hands to pull him back out again. I wrote about this in the weeks following the U.S. general election, and two weeks later I learned that Steven had died. When I was fifteen, I caught sight of him briefly in a hallway in my high school, but I quickly turned down another corridor. That’s the last time I saw him.

Oxenfree, PC

I spoke to my brother on the phone for three minutes (cumulative) in 2016. He bought me presents for Christmas, he did not know I wasn’t coming home for the holidays. In late spring, he and I teased my father in a series of haikus on a family-wide e-mail chain.

Watch Dogs 2, PS4

“Sometimes it is nice to walk around in a big, colourful world.”

“Sometimes it is nice to walk around in a big, colourful world.”

 

honourable mentions:

ladykiller in a bind

overcooked

dark souls 3

hitman

inside

games to play the month you feel your feet have turned to dust

this is a list of games i played the month following the u.s. presidential election, written at the end of november

About a week before the U.S. general election, I sat on a hotel bed with friends playing Catacombs of Solaris. Catacombs of Solaris is what might happen if a handful of glow sticks were hastily knit together into a maze, which in turn were trying valiantly to cling to some memory of the physics of space. The walls start and stop as you do, shifting the landscape back and forth like an optical illusion gone wrong. The colours are bright and it hurts my eyes as I aim the camera towards solid blocks of colours until it turns the screen fuschia.

“Oh. Huh. I think you broke it,” my friend says to me.

“I think I just lost my footing,” I say.

The day after the election, I stand on wooden floorboards in the countryside. There is soft light – west country sunset sort of light – seeping in through a window. There are no newspapers here. My socked feet toe the edges of books stacked against the baseboard (they creep along the walls, under the bed, propping up lamps) and Ella Fitzgerald wafts up from the radio downstairs. She is singing “Paper Moon.” The irony is not lost on me. In my pocket, is an advanced copy of Pokémon Moon, which I am to review for the newspaper. It is the last thing I want to do with my time. Reinvention of Childhood Classic Shocks Nation. I go and sit curled next to a fire, where my boyfriend writes music. He is carrying on. I look down at my DS, chirping cheerily away in my hands. I name my starter Pokémon before closing the console. I stare at the wall. I think about my friend whose job it is to design a contingency plan for climate change for the entirety of Canada. I close my eyes. I count to ten. I open the console. I play the game and I write the review, because it is my job.

I am an American transplant in England. My own childhood home is situated next to the Potomac River, just south of Washington, D.C. I imagine bits of the river are frozen over now. When I was eight or nine or ten the neighbourhood kids and I would walk out past the docks on the iced-over waters, shrieking and giggling when we heard the hissing and popping of the ground splintering beneath our feet. We’d dare each other to inch a little bit further out, closer and closer to the other bank. Once, my friend Steven’s foot fell through a patch of especially thin ice on a misstep. We had to grab hands, a chain of children on a frozen riverbed, pulling their friend out from freezing waters. I wonder where our parents were. This is not a game I recommend.

Back in London, I download Carl Burton’s Islands: Non-Places. It is a beautiful homage to San Francisco. Or perhaps Los Angeles. Or maybe some other southern Californian city I have never been to. I suppose it is also, as the title suggests, not quite any of those places, but rather a collection of hazy, minimalist vignettes of spaces that are not real – but only just. In a wash of red light, palm trees head single file up an escalator, where they receive a quick shower. That sort of thing.

In another scene, an apartment building grows out of the ground in a parking lot, and a car rolls into the garage. There are sounds of a person exiting the car, walking upstairs, and turning on a television set. Here, my game freezes, and will not move forward. I am stuck staring at a brown building in the middle of a parking lot in a part of America I cannot recognise. There is the sound of running water.

After a minute, I restart the game.

when the sun sets at 4.30

It is harder to stay motivated in the autumn-to-winter months, I think. Here are a few things I have done in that time, and what I am preparing to do once the days get longer:

I made a few more games -- they showed at The Showroom Gallery at the beginning of November, and ended up at the Victoria and Albert Museum at the end of November. (It is a strange thing to watch other people do.) I still write for the Guardian -- about monthly, these days. I'll be contributing to a games and digital culture magazine A Profound Waste of Time in 2017 -- its Kickstarter campaign is here, and if the list of names I've found myself alongside are any indication, it will be very good. I'll be doing Train Jame 2017 -- a 52-hour game jam on a train from Chicago to San Francisco -- with a number of friends and colleagues on our way to GDC. 

Winter is a time to chip away at progress like a screwdriver to an iced-over freezer. It is cold and tiresome, but I can see a microwave curry at the back there. It's keeping me going.