Peter Mattsson
Staff BioArticles by Peter Mattsson:
Silence review
Daedalic's sequel to The Whispered World is a gorgeous, emotionally moving experience with just a few narrative weak spots.
Demetrios: The BIG Cynical Adventure review
This colourfully snarky cartoon indie is a quality adventure, with an updated option to flush any unwanted toilet humour.
Wailing Heights review
The supernatural, body-hopping musical adventure is a howling good time with a thin story and just a few rough edges.
Slap Village review
It may be just the first step into a larger frontier ahead, but this quirky anachronistic Western will show y'all a good time while it lasts.
The Song of Seven: Chapter 1: Overture review
A charming fairy tale adventure gets off to a rousing start as both a standalone piece and series introduction.
P.O.L.L.E.N. review
Even without VR, this serious sci-fi adventure is rich in fertile atmosphere and ideas, if not challenge or story coherence.
Nelly Cootalot: The Fowl Fleet review
Alasdair Beckett-King's loony pirate adventure is a pun-filled hoot to play and leaves very little to grouse about.
Samorost 3 review
There's plenty to trumpet about in a stellar and surprisingly lengthy third installment from Amanita Design.
Shardlight review
Wadjet Eye's latest is another great slice of sci-fi worldbuilding, though the story doesn't shine as brightly as its unique post-apocalyptic setting.
Shardlight hands-on archived preview
Wadjet Eye broke off the first piece of its upcoming post-apocalyptic adventure for an early first-hand look.
Adventurezator: When Pigs Fly review
This two-in-one fairy tale adventure and game creator has all the proper ingredients, but doesn't have the recipe just right quite yet.
STASIS review
You won't want to sleep on this indie isometric sci-fi horror that's destined to be a classic that holds up well into the future.
Damn Virgins review
This offbeat indie FMV adventure is a fun first experience, but its flimsy story is obviously saving itself for a sequel.
Bunker: The Underground Game review
This lighthearted indie romp is nicely grounded in classic genre formula, though its attempts at comedy come up shallow.
Morningstar: Descent to Deadrock review
Remade for commercial re-release, this short but decent sci-fi adventure rarely elevates above its modest ambitions.