When I’m asked for a favorite game or even just a preferred genre, I have a hard time picking just one. But if you simply ask me what my favorite type of game is, then I won’t hesitate: I love games where you take notes.
This crystallized for me during my first play through of 2012’s Fez, a gorgeous puzzle platformer full of secrets, puzzles, and codes to decipher. The game didn’t outright tell me to keep notes, but its cryptic glyphs practically begged to be cataloged on paper. Soon, I was rewarded with puzzles that leapt off the screen and into my notebook, where larger and larger revelations gave way to even deeper puzzles. For example, a code written in game vertically needed to be rotated 90 degrees so it could be read left to right, a leap in logic made much easier when I simply rotated my notebook. Eureka!
Keeping a gaming notebook made my experience playing Fez a richer experience, and one I was excited to repeat in some of my favorite games of the decade: Her Story, The Return of the Obra Dinn, and Outer Wilds. More recently, The Case of the Golden Idol scratched this particular itch with its intricate mysteries and clever puzzles. Keeping a notebook at hand for these games made piecing together clues and uncovering new threads a more involved experience.
That’s why I made the video above, to celebrate this particular gaming niche. While I enjoy games with a little mystery, the pleasure of taking gaming notes is not exclusive to them. Everything from Animal Crossing to Hitman can benefit from keeping a gaming journal. Some of my coworkers also made their way through Fez with the help of a notepad, but they also scribbled along to games like Mass Effect, Hades, The Witness, and Football Manager.
After releasing
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