Tags / emotional

"emotional"

10 BuzzVerdicts across Movies (2), PC Games (4), Mobile Games (1), Books (2), TV Shows (1)

Inside Out

4.7

2015 · Pete Docter, Ronnie del Carmen · 95 min · Animation / Comedy

Inside Out is Pixar firing on all cylinders, taking a high-concept premise about the emotions inside a child's head and turning it into something that hits harder than most live-action dramas. The world-building is endlessly inventive, the voice cast is perfectly matched to their roles, and the central message about the necessity of sadness lands with a force that catches most viewers off guard. A few criticisms stick, mainly that Riley herself feels underwritten and that the adventure plot follows a familiar path, but those feel like small complaints against a film that won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature and left entire theater audiences in tears. It's one of those rare animated films that earns its emotional payoff honestly.

Chicory: A Colorful Tale

4.5

2021 · Adventure / Puzzle · PC / Steam

Chicory: A Colorful Tale wraps a deeply personal story about self-doubt and creative anxiety inside a painting adventure that anyone can pick up and enjoy. The brush mechanics are inventive and the world is a joy to explore, but it's the emotional honesty that sticks with you long after the credits roll. A few boss encounters feel clunky, and the late game can drag slightly, but this is one of those rare games where the heart behind it shines through every design choice.

Spiritfarer

4.5

2020 · Management · PC / Steam

Spiritfarer is a game about saying goodbye, and it earns every one of those goodbyes through hours of cooking, building, exploring, and caring for characters who feel like more than quest givers. The management systems are satisfying without being stressful, the hand-drawn animation is gorgeous, and the emotional payoffs hit harder than most games twice its budget. It runs long and the late-game pacing sags, but the moments that matter, and there are many, make it one of the most affecting games of its generation.

Florence

4.5

2018 · Interactive Story

Florence does more with thirty minutes than most games accomplish in thirty hours. Its tiny interactive vignettes capture the full arc of a first love with warmth, honesty, and a soundtrack that lingers long after the screen goes dark. It won't satisfy anyone looking for challenge or length, and the price-per-minute math is rough. But judging Florence by those standards misses the point entirely. This is a small, beautiful thing that earns every award it collected.

Ori and the Blind Forest

4.5

2015 · Platformer · PC / Steam

Ori and the Blind Forest is one of those rare games where every element works in concert. The platforming is precise and satisfying, the world is gorgeous and worth exploring, and the story hits harder than most games ten times its length. The Definitive Edition's added difficulty options and areas only strengthen the package. Escape sequences will test your patience, and the save system can amplify frustration in spots, but those are small costs for a game that has earned its place among the best platformers ever made. It's the kind of experience that sticks with you long after the credits.

Ori and the Will of the Wisps

4.5

2020 · Action Platformer · PC / Steam

Ori and the Will of the Wisps is a sequel that improves on its predecessor in nearly every meaningful way. The combat has real depth now, the movement is among the best the genre has ever produced, and the visual and musical presentation operates at a level most games can only aspire to. Some escape sequences frustrate more than they thrill, and certain abilities feel underused outside their introductory areas, but these are small complaints against a game that consistently reaches for something beautiful and lands it. Moon Studios built a platformer that resonates on an emotional level while still delivering satisfying action and exploration. That combination is rarer than it should be.

Up

4.3

2009 · Pete Docter, Bob Peterson · 96 min · Animation / Adventure

A film defined by the best ten minutes Pixar has ever produced, followed by an adventure that never quite reaches the same height. That opening sequence earns its place among the most emotionally powerful moments in animation, and the score alone justifies watching it twice. The adventure half is fun, colorful, and occasionally thrilling, even if it settles into more familiar territory. What saves the whole thing is Carl's emotional arc, which gives the action real stakes and real heart. It's a very good movie that happens to contain a great one inside it.

Continue Online: Memories

4.0

2015 · Stephan Morse · 374 pages · LitRPG / Science Fiction

Continue Online: Memories is one of the more unusual entries in the LitRPG genre, a book that cares far more about its protagonist's emotional state than his stat sheet. Morse wrote a character study disguised as a virtual reality adventure, and the result is something that sticks with readers long after they finish it. The slow opening and unconventional structure will lose some people, but for those willing to meet it on its own terms, this is LitRPG that actually has something to say about what it means to be human.

Challenger's Call

3.5

2018 · Nathan Thompson · 512 pages · LitRPG / Portal Fantasy

Challenger's Call is a slow-burn LitRPG that asks a lot of patience before it pays off, and whether that tradeoff works depends entirely on what you're looking for. The emotional depth is real, the trauma-to-power mechanic is wholly original, and the character work is stronger than most of what the genre produces. But the first book demands commitment through a heavy, sometimes exhausting setup before the story Thompson is building comes into focus. For readers willing to give it the runway it needs, the series behind it is widely considered one of the best in the genre. For those who need momentum from page one, the asking price is steep.