Check out this fever dream of a hand-drawn game
Thousands of works, illustrated by hand, make up the world of Sketchy Fables.
Compiling some 8,000 pieces of hand-drawn artwork, artist Alle Jong's upcoming Sketchy Fables is a bold-looking experimental game that clearly wants to not only defy visual conventions, but the structure of a game. Described by Jong as a "comic-book that has broken up over a landscape," Sketchy Fables seems to draw from visual novels, art games, comic books, and cartoons to portray a world for you to explore and find the story of.
The game world has touches of surrealism, but at the same time reaches for a kind of thick-lined impressionism. Everyday objects like trees are infused with movement, and visual boundaries are drawn with harsh lines and the kind of clipping that'd be considered a flaw in more mainstream games, but are used as tool here.
"There is an Main storyline, but nothing is what it seems," says the Steam store page. Videos on Jong's YouTube show in-progress versions of the game going back over a year. Sketchy Fables doesn't yet have a release date.
A gameplay trailer, released just this week, shows off the world from foot and from inside a train. From the description: "In this gameplay video the player jumps on an train and travels from Cybercity to Bird city."
You can find Sketchy Fables on Steam, where it doesn't yet have a release date. You can follow development on official site sketchyfables.com.
The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
Jon Bolding is a games writer and critic with an extensive background in strategy games. When he's not on his PC, he can be found playing every tabletop game under the sun.