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  • Screenshot from a fan remake of The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening. Link swings his sword in the center as he's surrounded by enemies, shrubbery and other details. The view is zoomed out farther than the original.

    Nintendo has unofficial The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening PC remake taken down (update)

    by 
    Will Shanklin
    Will Shanklin
    12.15.2023

    An anonymous and inventive Nintendo fan has recreated the Game Boy classic The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening with a twist. The widescreen Windows remake adds high frame rate support and lets you zoom out to view a larger portion — or even all — of Koholint Island.

  • Dwarf Fortress

    Iconic ASCII sim 'Dwarf Fortress' will hit Steam and Itch on December 6th with major upgrades

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    11.01.2022

    The new version of the 16-year-old game has pixel art, a new sound track, a tutorial for new players and a revamped UI.

  • Double Fine

    'Day of the Tentacle' fans create free, unofficial sequel

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    07.23.2018

    The classic point-and-click adventure game Day of the Tentacle was released a hair over 25 years ago, so fans have been waiting a long time for a follow-up. With little sign of Double Fine releasing another entry in the series, some fans have taken the initiative to create their own, unofficial sequel. It's called Return of the Tentacle and you can download it right now for Windows, Mac and Linux. Best of all, the game is available for the low, low price of zero dollars.

  • WinterDrake

    'Breath of the NES' is a retro 'Zelda' fan project destined to die

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    04.24.2017

    While you wait for something else to play on your Switch (might I suggest looking into TumbleSeed?), you could kill some time with Breath of the NES. As the name suggests, the fan-project was inspired by Nintendo's 8-bit Breath of the Wild prototype that the company divulged during a GDC panel earlier this year. This isn't a straight facsimile though. Developer WinterDrake has added modern lighting and shadows (the fireflies are particularly impressive), while keeping gameplay mostly familiar.

  • Matt Makes Games

    'TowerFall' ups the mayhem with eight-person local multiplayer

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    08.30.2016

    The developers behind TowerFall are working on more than just a game about climbing a mountain. That's right: Matt Thorson has also released an official mod that brings support for up to eight players to the charming, retro (and possibly violent, depending on your friends) local multiplayer component of TowerFall. It'll run you a fitting $8.88 to download from the game's itch.io page. Thorson is quick to note, however, that this isn't TowerFall proper.

  • Cardboard Computer

    The fourth 'Kentucky Route Zero' chapter is finally here

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    07.20.2016

    Kentucky Route Zero's fourth chapter is really, actually, truly here. Seriously. Following a two-year-plus gap since the adventure game's third installment, you can finally grab the penultimate episode from your digital distributor of choice (including Steam, GOG, Humble Store and itch.io). "This has been a challenging process for us, but we're excited about the work and [are] eager to share it with you," developer Cardboard Computer writes.

  • TS Eliot and a tragic childhood in 'Home is Where One Starts'

    by 
    Jessica Conditt
    Jessica Conditt
    05.21.2015

    You stand on the edge of a strip of asphalt, in the middle of a breezy, weedy, Southern forest. It's nearly sunset and the day's final rays sprawl over hay rolls and a small pond across the road. Behind you, a long trailer home sits in a clearing, piles of old and discarded possessions heaped haphazardly around it. More hazy structures dot the horizon, and at your feet there's a small, elephant-shaped backpack. You pick it up and turn it around. A woman's voice calmly says, "I remember missing the school bus that morning." True enough, the bus never comes and you're free to roam around the immediate area, exploring the forest, trash, houses and cemetery around you, learning more about yourself and your past. This is Home is Where One Starts..., a short exploration game inspired by TS Eliot's The Four Quartets and created by indie developer David Wehle. I spoke with Wehle about the poetic influences behind his game and the wider state of exploration-based games.