Cultist Simulator

Cultist Simulator is a card-based simulation video game developed by indie studio Weather Factory and published by Humble Bundle. It was released for Microsoft Windows, macOS and Linux computer systems in May 2018, with mobile versions developed by Playdigious and released in April 2019. A port for Nintendo Switch was released in February 2021.

Cultist Simulator
Developer(s)Weather Factory
Playdigious (mobile)
Publisher(s)Humble Bundle
Playdigious (Switch)
EngineUnity
Platform(s)
Release31 May 2018
Genre(s)Simulation
Mode(s)Single-player

In a 1920s Lovecraftian horror setting, the player amasses and expends human and nonhuman followers alongside occult texts and tools, in discovering and then pursuing any of a number of wildly differing paths to immortality, while carefully avoiding deaths arising from starvation, despair, madness, or the attention of powerful adversaries. The game is experienced through an array of playing cards moved about on a tabletop, with cards occasionally pulled from a map representing a transcendent reality accessible in dreams.

Success requires partial familiarization with an intricate "Secret Histories" mythology invented for this game and for connected Weather Factory projects "Book of Hours" (a followup game slated for 2023 release) and tabletop RPG "The Lady Afterwards." Reviewers praised the game's writing, while others criticized its pacing.

Gameplay

Screenshot towards the latter stages of the game

Cultist Simulator is a narrative-driven simulation game that has the player take on the role of a citizen in one of several 1920s European capitals, chiefly one resembling London. The player's actions may lead to their creating an illegal cult in pursuit of semi-divinity for themselves or others. The game's mechanics are presented as a combination of playing cards and timed "verb" boxes/action buttons in which the cards are placed. Cards can represent human and nonhuman NPCs, attributes such as health, passion or reason, language proficiencies, occult books and scraps of lore, rituals, day jobs, influences obtained from dream, obsessions, cities, excavation sites, magical tools and ingredients, currencies, etc. Player choices involve combining these cards within different "verb" boxes with varying, complex outputs. The player drops cards into verbs which may respond by demanding more cards if not directly pulling them from the table, both before and after the player commits the inserted cards starting a timer for when output cards can be collected. The initial, default "Aspirant" character begins with only a "Work" verb and two cards: a menial job and the health needed to work one shift of it. After the timer the player collects a temporarily exhausted Health card, the job, and cards representing some funds.

As the game progresses, new action buttons can appear. Some of these are beneficial, adding more options that players can do, such as Study, Talk, Explore, or Dream. Other action buttons are a detriment to the player's progress. For example, players will eventually get an action button that reflects the passage of their character's time in the game, which will automatically consume wealth cards; should the player have no wealth cards when this action's timer completes, they will gain Hunger cards, which leads to a chain of cards and action buttons that can lead to the death of the character. Some cards, often generated by action buttons, also have timers attached, either which they will burn out, or may revert to a different card type. The game takes place in real-time, but the player has the option of pausing the game to review cards and actions, and to place or collect cards from the board. The game ultimately has many different parallel victory and failure conditions, both based on "sane" and "insane" routes that the player's character may uncover.[1]

Plot

The game lacks a central plot structure that the player follows. Instead the lore of the game is revealed through a variety of explorations to different ruins, reading of found books, and other methods. In order to accomplish this the player can learn to speak a variety of languages such as Latin or Sanskrit to help decode knowledge found.

Moreover, as the story progresses the player will attract attention in the form of "Hunters", agents of the suppression sent to find you, and "Rivals", other cult leaders looking to attain the same secrets and power as you. Part of your role in the game is to mitigate these two factions. If a player dies during a run, the game will reset often with the new player character investigating the mysterious death of the previous player character.

Development

Weather Factory is an independent game studio created by Alexis Kennedy, who previously had founded Failbetter Games. Failbetter had developed several gothic and Lovecraftian horror story-driven games, including Fallen London. Kennedy split from Failbetter and founded Weather Factory in 2016, looking for a more hands-on role in designing and writing than his management-focused role at Failbetter.[2] Cultist Simulator represented the studio's first game and an experimental title that they could produce quickly with minimal costs.[1] Humble Bundle published the game.[3]

The use of card-driven narrative systems was already something Kennedy was familiar with through Fallen London. Kennedy said that a card-based approach helped to make concepts tangible and allowed players to organize the cards as they saw best fit.[1] Cultist Simulator represented the most minimalist take Kennedy could take with the card-based concept, since cards represented a vast vocabulary of terms within the game.[1] While Kennedy provided user interface elements to help the player understand where to place cards, much of the strategy and reasoning was something he wanted players to discover for themselves. Kennedy did this to both mimic crafting systems in other role-playing games, and to create the Lovecraftian feel to the game. Kennedy said the player "will be able to mesh together an understanding of this very deep, very complicated lore in the same way that the scholars of Lovecraft are actually doing in fiction."[1]

Kennedy announced the project in September 2016, providing a free simplified web-driven version of how the game would play, and with plans to use Kickstarter to raise funds for an anticipated October 2017 release date.[4] Kennedy launched the Kickstarter in September 2017 and pushed the release date into May 2018; the Kickstarted succeeded in obtaining £82,000 of its target £30,000 fundraising goal.[5] The game was released on 31 May 2018 for Microsoft Windows, macOS, and Linux systems.[6]

Kennedy extended Cultist Simulator through downloadable content following the Paradox Interactive model.[1] The first such content, "The Dancer", was released on 16 October 2018.[7] A free update released on 22 January 2019 includes an extended end-game, where the player is challenged to take their successful cult leader and elevate them into a godlike state.[8][9] Two additional DLC packs, "Priest" and "Ghoul" were released in May 2019, alongside the Cultist Simulator: Anthology Edition which includes the game and all DLC content in a single package.[10][11] In May 2020, a DLC named "Exile" was released, which traded the base game's lore-researching and cult-building mechanics for flight across a map of 1920s Eurasia and North Africa from close pursuit by occult gangsters.

Ports for iOS and Android have been developed by Playdigious and were released in the second quarter of 2019.[12]

A port for Nintendo Switch was released on 2 February 2021.[13][14]

Reception

Cultist Simulator received mixed reviews on Metacritic.[15][16]

TouchArcade enjoyed the visual style of the game, saying it beautifully evoked "the early 20th century aesthetic of the game’s narrative". Nintendo World Report felt it could take too long to make meaningful progress, and it was easy to make a mistake that would reset it. PC Gamer liked how the trial and error gameplay could lead to experimentation, "each failure comes with a bit more knowledge of how the game works and how to avoid whichever disaster befell you the last time". Eurogamer praised the writing, saying it evoked a feeling of "a protean clutch of riddles, scholarly marginalia, back-alley rumours and pointed epithets".[22]

According to Alexis Kennedy, Cultist Simulator's sales surpassed 35,000 units within six days of release, which caused the game to break even and generate a profit in its first week. Its sales were similar in volume to those of Sunless Sea over the same period.[23]

Cultist Simulator won the award for "Best Emotional Game Design" at the Emotional Game Awards 2018.[24] It was nominated in the "Debut Game" and "Game Innovation" categories for the 15th British Academy Games Awards,[25] and won the awards for "Best Game Design" and "Best Innovation" at the Develop:Star Awards, whereas its other nomination was for "Best Narrative".[26][27]

References

  1. Velocci, Carli (22 May 2018). "Why the Cultist Simulator devs built their Lovecraftian game on a house of cards". Gamasutra. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  2. Sinclair, Brendan (25 May 2016). "Alexis Kennedy leaving Failbetter Games". GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  3. Chalk, Andy (10 April 2018). "Cultist Simulator launch trailer confirms a late-May release date (Update)". PC Gamer. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
  4. O'Connor, Alice (30 September 2016). "Dark Ritual: Failbetter Co-Founder's Cultist Simulator". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  5. Warr, Philippa (1 September 2017). "Cultist Simulator brings cosmic longing to Kickstarter". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  6. Evans-Thirlwell, Edwin (31 May 2018). "Cultist Simulator review - a crabbed but intoxicating bargain with otherworldly forces". Eurogamer. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  7. Cox, Matt (3 October 2018). "Cultist Simulator: The Dancer will hit the floor on October 16th". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  8. Brown, Fraser (8 January 2019). "Cultist Simulator's new mode lets you fight immortals and become a god". PC Gamer. Retrieved 9 January 2019.
  9. O'Conner, Alice (22 January 2019). "Cultist Simulator summons New Game+ mode today". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved 22 January 2019.
  10. Skrebels, Joe (29 May 2019). "Weather Factory Reveals New Game, Book of Hours and Announces Cultist Simulator: Anthology Edition". IGN. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
  11. Tarason, Dominic (30 May 2019). "Cultist Simulator final DLC released, spin-off Book Of Hours announced". Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  12. Wales, Matt (28 February 2019). "Cultist Simulator's card-based cosmic horror coming to iOS and Android this "spring"". Eurogamer. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
  13. "Cultist Simulator coming to Switch". Gematsu. 29 October 2020. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  14. "Cultist Simulator for Switch launches February 2, 2021". Gematsu. 1 December 2020. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  15. "Cultist Simulator for PC Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  16. "Cultist Simulator: Initiate Edition for Switch Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  17. Robin, Joshua (25 August 2021). "Cultist Simulator Review". Nintendo World Report. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
  18. Livingston, Christopher (1 June 2018). "Cultist Simulator review". PC Gamer. Retrieved 3 July 2018.
  19. Fenner, Robert (31 May 2018). "Cultist Simulator". RPGFan. Archived from the original on 31 January 2021. Retrieved 31 January 2021.
  20. Lazarides, Tasos (1 April 2019). "'Cultist Simulator' Review — Explore And You Shall Be Rewarded (Or Sacrificed)". TouchArcade. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  21. Chan, Stephanie (25 August 2021). "Cultist Simulator review — shuffling your way onto another plane of reality". VentureBeat. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
  22. "Cultist Simulator review - a crabbed but intoxicating bargain with otherworldly forces". Eurogamer.net. 31 May 2018. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  23. Kennedy, Alexis (11 June 2018). "After the Dawn: a mini-retrospective on Cultist Simulator". Gamasutra. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  24. Moyse, Chris (12 March 2018). "Here are the winners of The Emotional Games Awards 2018". Destructoid. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  25. "BAFTA Games Awards nominations 2019". BAFTA. 14 March 2019. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
  26. Blake, Vikki (16 May 2019). "Shortlist for Develop:Star Awards 2019 revealed". MCV. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  27. Blake, Vikki (11 July 2019). "Here are this year's Develop:Star Awards winners". MCV. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
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