Here I was playing Unpacking, essentially going through the motions and emotions of a fourth house move in a year, only this one wasn’t my own. I too, have a stupid box full of cables (three, in fact) I’ll never get around to sorting out. I too, lugged around my university degree and wondered why the hell I was doing so before dumping it under my bed. I too, have unpacked my Donnie Darko and Ghost World DVDs and arranged them proudly on multiple shelves over the course of the decade, simultaneously looking back on them fondly and thinking about how maybe I should get rid of them the next time I move. That’s true of the items you unpack too, especially the ones that might cause you to recall your own personal relationship with something similar. Unpacking’s eight chapters, marking different years of its protagonist’s life, are all understated arrangements that barely insinuate anything as detailed as what I’ve suggested, but manage to speak volumes regardless.įrameborder="0" allow="accelerometer autoplay clipboard-write encrypted-media gyroscope picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen> Or having to dramatically downsize and cursing the fact that you have way too many books. Or moving in with a partner and witnessing the very visible clash of possessions, while you quietly wonder in the back of your head whether this was the right decision or not. It’s the things like moving into a sharehouse for the first time, and being extra careful not to encroach on the status quo, no matter how bad it might be. Read: The making of Unpacking: From bullet-hell to domestic heaven Moreover, it deftly captures the emotions that can come with both moving into a new stage of life, and rediscovering mementos of stages gone by. These are pivotal markers in someone’s life, and Unpacking is framed as a look back through an old photo album that explores some of these key moments. Before that, I’ve also made the typical moves out of home, into share houses, and in with a partner. I’ve upsized, downsized, and sometimes I can’t believe how my life has changed in just that time. In the past year, I’ve moved house three times due to a variety of circumstances. But my experience of playing Unpacking was incredibly affective, a pensive, personal reflection about the ups and downs of life for both the game’s protagonist, and for myself. There may well be a novelty value that makes the game’s premise initially intriguing, and entertainment value to be found in playing it with other people and discovering each other’s unspoken household quirks. It cut right into my soul with a fine touch. Unpacking is a game that caused me to feel an incredible nostalgia about various periods of my own life, despite it having relatively little in common with the specifics of the game’s unseen protagonist or their overarching story.
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