Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Features

Simpler Times is the game about moving I need right now

Add as a preferred source on Google
Summer Gaming Marathon Feature Image
This story is part of our Summer Gaming Marathon series.

Simpler Times is that rare game preview that also lines up with goings-on in my personal life. At this year’s Summer Game Fest Play Days, I was able to check out the meditative Day of the Devs indie game from Stoneskip and iam8Bit about packing up to move just before I move across the country in a couple of weeks.

Simpler Times - Summer Game Fest 2023 WORLD PREMIERE REVEAL TRAILER

Of course, making a big move like that surfaces a lot of emotions, and games like Unpacking, and now Simpler Times, are keen on homing in on those feelings. What pleasantly surprised me was that Simpler Times does so with a more reflective, contemplative, and optimistic tone, giving me the confidence I needed before a significant life change.

Recommended Videos

Embrace the move

In Simpler Times, you play as a girl named Taina who is packing up things in her childhood home as she prepares to move away to college. It was inspired by the personal life experiences of its developers at Stoneskip, who recently made the move from Berlin back to Transylvania. My Summer Game Fest Play Days demo was for the game’s opening, which sees Taina packing up things and also eases players into the game’s controls.

Simpler Times plays from a first-person perspective, although it can feel like a point-and-click adventure game as players move around and interact with objects at predetermined places. Despite that, Simpler Times feels surprisingly nonlinear. After some short, in-world tutorials, I was free to explore and pack up various things scattered around Taina’s bedroom. Almost every object within the room was interactable, and I could move and toss them around as I saw fit.

Taina's bedroom in Simpler Times.
Iam8bit

There are a lot of cute, smaller interactions, like taking photos with a camera or picking up a pencil and drawing on a piece of paper, that add more depth than expected. Imagine an immersive sim where instead of trying to find the best way to get through a room or complete a challenge, you were just trying to explore the space to its fullest. I didn’t even find the notebook that serves as an objective list of sorts until the end of my demo time.

The main crux of progression is packing, as I had to find the right objects to put into certain boxes. One would be for childhood stuffed animals, another for Taina’s favorite books. This not only felt like good practice for what I’m about to do in a couple of weeks, but enabled a lot of cute interactions as well. Some objects can be interacted with on a deeper level, like picking up a pencil to draw on a piece of paper.

Most of the time, though, Taina will comment on whatever she’s picking up. That inner monologue is certainly reflective, but it never feels like it gets too pessimistic, at least in the bit of the game that I played. Taina is a little sad to pack away her stuffed animals, but doesn’t act as if she’ll never see them again and instead chooses to think about what it’d be like if she actually brought them with her. A note from a friend that moved also paints the experience as scary, but ultimately rewarding.

Taina uses the camera in Simpler Times.
Iam8bit

These kinds of interactions make Simpler Times a game that encourages people to take control and embrace life changes. Playing the demo was a very positive experience. I came away from it with a smile on my face and a newfound confidence that no matter what challenges I encounter during my move, things will work out how they are supposed to. Playing a bit of Simpler Times reminded me that moving doesn’t have to be a scary thing, and that made it the most pleasant game I tried at Summer Game Fest Play Days this year.

Simpler Times will be released for PC in 2024.

Tomas Franzese
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A former Gaming Staff Writer at Digital Trends, Tomas Franzese now reports on and reviews the latest releases and exciting…
Valve’s Steam Controller just got a lot more useful outside Steam
The Steam Controller’s biggest problem may already be getting fixed
Two Steam Controllers in use with the Steam Deck

Valve’s new Steam Controller has had a pretty good start. Early reactions have been positive, and the $99 controller sold out quickly after launch.

That demand also brought scalpers, who started listing the controller at inflated prices. Valve has since introduced a reservation queue to give real buyers a better shot at future stock. Still, one complaint kept coming up. For many players, the Steam Controller was simply too locked into Steam.

Read more
California wants to stop publishers from killing online games, and it just made some progress
The state’s new Protect Our Games Act just cleared another major hurdle.
Game Over Text Pacman

Modern gaming has somehow normalized the idea that publishers can permanently shut down games people already paid for. Thankfully, California is now trying to push back against that with its proposed “Protect Our Games Act,” which has officially cleared another key legislative hurdle with strong backing from the Stop Killing Games movement.

California’s new bill could force publishers to preserve online games

Read more
Xbox Elite 3 controller leak shows a familiar design garnished with some mysterious buttons
The Xbox Elite 3 looks familiar, until you spot the mystery controls
A customized Xbox Elite Series 2 controller made in Design Lab.

Microsoft's next Elite controller has just leaked, and the design looks familiar at first glance. Though, it's not just a typical refresh, as the next pro Xbox controller could be changing things up. In the recent Tecnoblog report, a possible Xbox Elite Controller Series 3 appeared in Brazil's Anatel certification database.

This upcoming controller keeps the premium Xbox layout and the customization features expected from the Elite line, while even adding a couple of new controls that are not immediately obvious in function.

Read more