'Rewilding' Asks: What Will You Do After the Climate Apocalypse?

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'Rewilding' Asks: What Will You Do After the Climate Apocalypse?
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'Rewilding', with its focus on the degradation of the natural world and the possibility of restoring it, belongs to a long tradition of games that grapple with environmental issues.

's celestial paintbrush restores nature with divine power.

“We made a first-person game explicitly to stress that Sydney, the protagonist, is not an RTS commander wielding unlimited resources,” says Spencer Bernstein, one of the developers. “They are an individual attempting to help, to experience some kind of nature, and figure out where they stand.” 's developers wondered if it would be possible to make a game that dealt with ecosystems in a way that was consistent with their experience of the world. “We spent basically an entire year wrestling with that question—how do we tell a story about climate change when the genre of video games is so much about giving your audience control over their environment?” says Parker Crandell, anotherQuestions that challenge long-held assumptions about player agency in games are becoming more common.

and Joe-Pye weed will run rampant if given its way. Instead of a powerful force reshaping the landscape, Syd’s a bit more relatable, an underpaid gig laborer wrestling with the meaning of it all.could have easily been a game about growing crops or cultivating therapeutic herbs, climbing ReGen’s corporate hierarchy, and making efficient environmental choices. But speedrunning the garden of Eden didn't make much sense to theteam.

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