

Concept art courtesy of Blurppy and Olly Moss While the big, AAA games like Halo and Call of Duty are stunning in their own right and have truly set new standards for video game graphics, the rise of the indie gaming industry is where true artistic experimentation, expression, and beauty thrives. Although we’re not sure whether this video game makes you want to “ Disconnect to Reconnect” and “ Visit Your National Parks” like “ Yosemite” more or whether the creepy mental trip factor makes you want to visit them less.Īll we know is it’s dang beautiful. The atmosphere is so beautifully rich, detailed, and uniquely designed. While the story is a mental trip in itself, the art just takes it to a whole ‘nother level. Olly Moss’s designs in Firewatch are so beautiful that every shot, every angle, every moment could be a computer screensaver. Which keeps you constantly questioning whether you can trust Henry in his distressed mental state. On top of that, however, the reason why Henry is “getting away from it all” is because his wife is super ill. But after kids start setting off fireworks, leaving threatening messages, and ransack his tower, he discovers that something strange is going on. In Firewatch, you play Henry – a guy working in a Firewatch tower to get away from it all in the wilderness of Wyoming in 1989, just his walkie talkie connecting him to the outside world. It’s as much an artistic experience as it is a narrative one.Īnd the concept art is equally incredible. People freaked out about it on Twitter when it first came out, and for good reason. Firewatchis a hot new experiential video game – pun not initially intended – by Campo Santo. We gotta talk about this GD VG for a second.

As with any art form, it’s constantly evolving.Īnd peeps, if you’ve been in a cave for the last few months (if you have, that’s awesome, let’s hear about it), you haven’t seen the latest in the video game artvolution: Firewatch.

It’s no debate anymore that video games are an art form…in fact, it’s shocking that it ever was.
