Please enter a valid email address
Please choose a platform
:
How does your child play this? Alone, with friends, with family? How did they discover it and what kept them coming back for more?
:
To verify your input please enter your email to create an account.
Email:
Play Overview
A Memoir Blue (2022) is a narrative game about an athlete's relationship with her mother. It's a story told through a dream, which you move along by interacting with everyday objects. It stands out for the metaphorical use of visual styles and the poignant territory of how success and failure are so closely linked and how parents inevitably struggle to support childhood passions.
Play is minimal but purposeful. Amongst other things, you push coins into a ticket machine, tap to board a train and place planks of wood to bridge a river. Other times you guide the rain to fall on a newspaper that then reveals a memory.
As you progress, you settle into not being responsible for that progress. As you do a story unfolds about the highs of sporting glory and the lows of isolation and the loneliness that was needed to create that success.
The result is a game that some may find, like Florence, too much like a movie. But actually, this is why it's interesting. Your light interactions implicate you in the narrative. You are involved in the tragic obsession with performance and reach for any hope that might help your character escape this. By the end, there is more here than there appeared as the experience leaves you with plenty to reflect upon in your own life.
Our examiner, Jo Robertson, first checked A Memoir Blue 20 months ago. It was re-examined by Ellen Robertson and updated 6 months ago.
Play is minimal but purposeful. Amongst other things, you push coins into a ticket machine, tap to board a train and place planks of wood to bridge a river. Other times you guide the rain to fall on a newspaper that then reveals a memory.
As you progress, you settle into not being responsible for that progress. As you do a story unfolds about the highs of sporting glory and the lows of isolation and the loneliness that was needed to create that success.
The result is a game that some may find, like Florence, too much like a movie. But actually, this is why it's interesting. Your light interactions implicate you in the narrative. You are involved in the tragic obsession with performance and reach for any hope that might help your character escape this. By the end, there is more here than there appeared as the experience leaves you with plenty to reflect upon in your own life.
Our examiner, Jo Robertson, first checked A Memoir Blue 20 months ago. It was re-examined by Ellen Robertson and updated 6 months ago.
There are lots of games similar to A Memoir Blue. Here are some we picked for you:
Play Style
This is a Narrative game with Adventure and Point-and-Click elements. This is a single-player game.
Duration
Play Time: This game will take between 1 and a half hours and 1 hour and 45 minutes to complete.
Benefits
Age Ratings
Rated for younger players in the US. Rated ESRB EVERYONE.
Skill Level
8+ year-olds usually have the required skill to enjoy this game. It's a slow game (that's almost not a game). You need to have the skill of interpreting what's happening on the screen and relating that to the story. Not so much so you can progress, but so the emotions of the game make sense.
Game Details
Release Date: 24/03/2022
Out Now: PC, PS4, Switch, Xbox One and iOS
Skill Rating: 8+ year-olds
Players: 1
Genres: Narrative (Adventure and Point-and-Click)
Accessibility: 20 features
Components: 2D Overhead and Cartoon
Developer: Cloisters I (@Cloisters_I)
© 2024 Family Gaming Database