According to a fact on a website I've never heard of, the average person spends about five years of their life waiting in lines. Five whole years! Other sites I've never visited before say it's more like 3 years, or six months, or two weeks. The point is, never try to confirm a fact because it takes forever and there are no reliable answers anywhere, ever.
The real point is: we all spend an unverifiable amount of time just waiting for stuff. We wait in line at the store or for a ride at the bus stop. We drum our fingers impatiently when the doctor's office puts us on hold and we fidget with rage while the person in front of us takes way too long at the ATM. We even wait for games to download, the most agonizing wait of all. I don't know it adds up to five years out of a lifetime, but you can bet it's a lot.
While Waiting is a game about doing stuff to entertain yourself while waiting for other stuff, and it's a pretty good game to play to entertain yourself while, y'know, waiting for other stuff.
I jumped in the other day while I was waiting for a meeting to end (sorry, PC Gamer coworkers). In the first scene, my character was waiting for a bus. I wasn't alone: there was a guy handing out flyers, there were other passengers waiting, a little dog was sitting on a bench, and there was a bulletin board with a few things tacked to it. While Waiting gave me some clues about how to pass the time, it didn't come right out and tell me: there are badges you earn by doing stuff, like «Be the richest guy on the bus» or «It is my bulletin board now» but you have to experiment to figure out exactly what to do.
I wandered around a bit. I pet the dog. I took a flyer, threw it away, and took several more. I picked things up and put them down. I pet the dog again. I eventually noticed some coins on the ground, and followed them offscreen to find a huge sack of money, so when the bus finally arrived I was indeed the richest person on it. The rest of the badges went unearned, but
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