Personal Trip to the Moon
by VoEC
Personal Trip to the Moon
Tags for Personal Trip to the Moon
Description
a video game about dysphoria and astronauts
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"Personal Trip to the Moon" is an experimental game about exploration and discovery which serves as a psychogram of a gray wasteland and its inhabitant.
It's a game about finding yourself 384400 kilometers away from home.
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Music: "Une chute sans fin" by "Another Moon" (SÊbastien Lombard).
"Visit Another Moon on bandcamp":http://anothermoon.bandcamp.com/
Special thanks to azrafe7 and everyone from the FlashPunk forums.
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"Personal Trip to the Moon" is the first game I have ever managed to release and as the title suggests it is a very personal project.
Any kind of feedback is highly apreciated and please keep an open mind while playing. Thank you.
~VoEC
How to Play
Arrow keys - Movement
Space - Interaction
C - Compass
Num+ - Volume Up
Num- - Volume Down
Num0 - Mute Sound
Developer Updates
For anyone that might be in need of it, Iâve uploaded an offline version here:
http://www.mediafire.com/?r9reahnbt2px689
Comments
say10
Aug. 02, 2012
i always wanted to go to the moon until i realised i was already there
vasfv
Apr. 28, 2013
i thought that he was going to suicide until i realised that he is just going to fly...
Azgara
Oct. 29, 2012
Well, i 5-starred it because of the atmosphere and the music and all (i love such games), but i really didn't get the storyline.
amberrito
Feb. 23, 2013
Why are all artistic games depressed and suicidal? It's beautiful, I won't deny it, but I'wondering if that's just my mind making that connection or if it really is about that all the time.
Wetterl
May. 12, 2013
Personal take on the story: The story is about feeling like someone else than you are, showing it here as transsexuality. The Man you play as in the beginning is the wish of who the main character wants to be, someone who can "fly to the moon", so to speak, someone who can do everything they want to. The negative comments to this are people that are trying to make the character accept reality, which she does in the ending.
I wouldn't call it a "sad" ending, so to speak, but rather an ending set in reality, an ending in which the main character can truly accept who she is, and work from there to go even further, not having to rely on delusions anymore.