It dawned on me this week, just moments after gnawing on the crispy arm of a guy that tried to kill me, that Sons of the Forest, the hardcore survival sim that's currently dominating Steam(opens in new tab), is a deeply funny game. Not so much because of the cannibalism part (though I did chuckle the first time I barbequed a human limb for all of 12 seconds and then ate it whole), but because I then turned around to find my faithful but bumbling NPC companion Kelvin ankle deep in a pond, staring blankly at the water. He'd been trying to yank fish out of the pond with his bare hands, something I had asked him to do about 15 minutes earlier and then swiftly forgotten.
I felt bad, because Kelvin was clearly so desperate to please me that he wouldn't let his lack of a fishing pole, hooks, bait, or functioning fish trap(opens in new tab) stop him from completing my arbitrary chore. I was on my way to give him a well-deserved pat on the back when I tripped over a fish. No, not a fish. It was 13 fish. A baker's dozen of trout haphazardly piled behind Kelvin, who presumably didn't have time to organize them because he'd just hoisted another from the water. Kelvin is a god of fishing! Of course he is! This game is so dumb. I'm into it.
I'm not the only one having a laugh with Kelvin. He's become everyone's favorite, bestest boy(opens in new tab). I wouldn't want to survive the forest without him. But Kelvin, like all of us, has gaps in his knowledge that can get him in trouble. For instance: the man absolutely cannot and should not be trusted around a treehouse.
It's very cool that Sons of the Forest's freeform building makes it easy to pick your favorite tree and make it your home. Treehouses are not only a tactically sound idea
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