The Town Of Light Preview at EGX Rezzed

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The Town Of Light Brings Horror In History

The go-to phrase employed to describe LKA.it’s The Town Of Light is “a different kind of horror game”. While true, after getting my hands on the console build for the Italian development team’s harrowing narrative game. I don’t feel that statement captures the delicacy and starkness that gives The Town Of Light it’s edge over other ‘horror’ games.

It’s frightening because, not only could the events of the psychiatric hospital in Volterra happen, they did happen. The game is not reliant on jump scares or ephemeral phantoms to inspire fright – it’s a gruelling and heart-wrenching dichotomy of the mistreatment and punishment people went through for suffering with mental health issues. Horror is found in it’s history.
You play as a woman named Renée, who during the 1930s was incarcerated in a psychiatric hospital in Volterra, Italy. The game is set in the first half of the 20th century, with the hospital now closed down. Renée returns to the now dilapidated hospital in an effort to piece together the parts of her life that were stolen from her. It’s a story of vindication, pain, isolation and the exploration of mental health stigma. Although Renée’s narrative is fictitious, the experiences and memories you uncover will feel very real.

 

 

The game is already out on PC. At EGX Rezzed, The Town Of Light’s 3D artist Lorenzo Conticelli walked me through the console build which additional features.

 

The Console Edition Of The Town Of Light Brings New Features

Conticelli is part of the team that admirably and meticulously recreated this hospital brick by brick in the game. The attention to detail is breath-taking. Every rusted gate to discarded wheelchair that was actually present when Conticelli and the LKA.IT team visited ‘Ospedale Psichiatrico di Volterra’ during the development stages of this game.

 
The console additions of the game feature the whole experience but with some added diary features that add wider context to Renée’s internal monologue. As she recounts how her time in the facility laid waste to her mental faculties. How it crushed her spirit, her mind and mutated her psyche. These diary entries aren’t an integral part of the game but rather require you to seek them out. All illustrated with scratchy artwork, changing tone according to Renée’s mental state as your progress. Pencil lines distort into bluntness with aggressive abandon and childlike doodles become figments of disturbed nightmares.

 
The Town Of Light plays like Myst. You progress by using your surroundings as visual navigators and puzzle solvers.The Town Of Light art team have made a special effort to keep the location as close to the original as possible – Italian signposts included.

However, even in my short play-through, I found it difficult to appreciate the craft when the game evokes such realism and pain through it’s world. Real people suffered her, relatives of people you might know. They forced to live in such dire situations at their most vulnerable – The Town Of Light amazing example of how we can use history in games to frame an exploration of a topic that’s painfully relevant still today.

The Town Of Light is currently available on Steam and will be available on PS4 and Xbox One this spring

Will Butler | @QuesaWilla

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