Season: A Letter to the Future review

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    Season: A Letter to the Future review


    There’s nothing I love more than a game world that wants to tell me a story, but it’s rare that I’m the one asked to do the telling. Season: A Letter To The Future has a vast horizon when it starts, painting a fascinating post-apocalyptic-ish setting where the player is tasked with documenting what they find. Yet the more I travel through Season, the more its vista shrinks, taken up instead by the story its narrator wants to tell and leaving no room for my own exploration.

    Need to know

    What is it? A narrative adventure game
    Expect to pay: £20.99 / $25
    Release date: January 31, 2023
    Developer: Scavengers Studio
    Publisher: Scavengers Studio
    Reviewed on: 64-Bit Windows 10, Nvidia GeForce GTX 970, Intel i7-4790K, 16GB RAM
    Multiplayer? No
    Steam Deck: Unverified
    Link: Steam page (opens in new tab)

    The starting promise is a tantalising one. Season begins with a character at some point in the future opening a journal, the one our narrating protagonist is about to embark with and begin to fill. This unnamed protagonist has been raised in an isolated mountain village and wants to journey out to capture the world’s current “season,” an era, before the next one comes along. There’s something cosy in this opening as you prepare to set off. The narrator’s mother carries it, thanks to a voice performance infused with warmth and encouragement. Together you create a pendant, infused with memories, to protect you on this journey.



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