Culture
Games
Scotland
Festivals
A Tamagotchi seance, macabre cartoon horror and an arty shmup: this new festival
spotlights a fertile Scottish games scene beyond Rockstar North
Walking through the doors of this boutique video game festival, you are
immediately greeted by a bullet hell shoot-em-up with a painterly twist. In ZOE
Begone!, you dodge and unleash attacks at blistering speed before the game
erupts into a euphoric shower of pointillist colour, dazzling the eyes and
punishing the thumbs. Next to it sits Left Upon Read; at first glance, a
dark-fantasy Quake clone, but one that gives you the bizarre task of checking
text messages on a smartphone as you slice your way through a dungeon. These are
subversive games, taking well-worn design tropes and breaking them in witty,
playful ways.
Rule-breaking is a major theme of Glasgow independent game festival, the latest
iteration of an event previously known as Southside games festival. It took
place last weekend at Civic House, nestled in the shadow of the M8, the concrete
eyesore that carves through Glasgow and connects the city with the wider central
belt. On display are more eccentric and smaller-budget games than those you see
on shelves, all made by developers who either live within Glasgow or a short
train ride away. Co-founder Joe Bain sees such works as part of the “wider
cultural landscape” of games, and sought to create a space treating them as
such. It’s a far cry from trade fairs such as Gamescom where, beyond the
boisterous public halls, the machinations of the games industry can feel as if
they’re moving in capital-driven lockstep.
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