Take on the role of an artificial intelligence in ‘Clarisse’

There are two things that I really like writing about: Indie titles that often get overlooked big the massive AAA only game outlets, and games that channel the graphical and play style of early 90s PC games that I grew up with. Not Human Games seems to understand me as the trailer for the upcoming Clarisse really caught my eye.

Not Human Games, an indie studio from Spain, announces that their game Clarisse has appeared on Steam Greenlight. Fans can support them by voting and leaving some comments. A free playable demo is also published for fans to check out, so the studio is doing far more than most through the service.

The art team of Not Human Games is formed by two of the artists who developed the art for the game Gods Will Be Watching, published by Devolver Digital.

Clarisse is a sci-fi Artificial Intelligence simulator with 2D pixelart, point & click mechanics, focused on a narrative experience, investigation and provoking an emotional response from the player. The player will take the role of an artificial intelligence called Clarisse, that was created to help and support an important doctor in his investigations.

Not Human Games are focused in trying to bring the player the sense of feeling like an Artificial Intelligence. You will learn progressively and feel like an AI that is learning things about the world that surrounds it. Through different mechanics and narrative experiences you will have the chance to know more about the experiment, Dr. Matt and even yourself.

READ:  'Warhammer 40,000: Eternal Crusade' offers up free version

I don’t know about you, but that’s enough to sell me on the experience. Whether the game can live up to that premise is another story, but there is enough here to earn my vote.

Game Features:

  • Futuristic pixelart aesthetic
  • Narrative experience and investigation
  • Click elements and playable actions
  • Puzzles

About Author

J. Luis

J. Luis is the current Editor-In-Chief here at GAMbIT. With a background in investigative journalism his work encompasses the pop-culture spectrum here, but he also works in the political spectrum for other organizations.

Learn More →