Mnémora: The Lenses of Galimán
by David_Marchand
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Mnémora: The Lenses of Galimán
Mnémora: The Lenses of Galimán 關聯標籤
簡介
呢隻game係阿根廷團體El Culebrón Timbal委託製作,改編自佢哋2018年電影《Mnémora: People, Power, and Time》。如果你鍾意南美低成本科幻片,想睇電影唔怕劇透都得。遊戲算係個模糊前傳。美術:Mer Grazzini,音效:Fede Cardinale。
玩法說明
方向鍵或WASD跑、跳、開終端。Spacebar攻擊。(手機同手掣都支援)
FAQ
留言
ST13R
Jan. 16, 2019
Very fun! Love the story and aesthetics, would love to see this developed further.
Thank you so much! Not likely that we’ll develop it further, since the client already paid us and they got what they wanted, but we might develop some of the fun stuff further in future projects.
C4gamer
Jan. 17, 2019
The thumbnail for this game made me think it was only in Spanish. I would take the text out of the thumbnail.
Ah, I hadn’t thought about it. Could be, could be.
RawEgg
Jan. 06, 2019
This game is actually really good, Im suprised by the low plays. You should have added english voices so people could relate more, but it's such a complete and fun game... gg 5/5
Hey thanks! Hiring professional English-speaking actors wasn’t a possibility then, but I’ll definitely try to have English voices in future voiced projects.
stalemate7
Jan. 19, 2019
I liked it, a little short but enjoyable. I liked the Spanish voice actors with English subs, thought it added to the game. Also liked that the two girls played differently (although only slightly). 4/5 from me
Why thank you!
canad8
Jan. 22, 2019
One of the voice actress sounds argentinian while the other has bolivian accent (maybe). Where are you guys from?
Argentina! And fun fact, the same person did the voices for both playable characters (while her sister did the voice for the NPC). The character Irupé is from pre-colonial times, so there isn’t any Argentina or Bolivia when she’s from. I wasn’t present for the recording, but I’m pretty sure the actor was trying to channel a Bolivian or North Argentine accent with her, since the Aboriginal population is much more present in that area. I think I would’ve preferred the difference in their voices to come more from their differing personalities rather than from any accent (especially since there is no real reason for Irupé to speak fluent Spanish and that’s just an artistic license we took), but it was mostly out of my hands.