
And later, when you switch paint for water to grow vines along walls, you'll likely find that climbing these vines and going around corners and over ledges can be a bit frustrating. Splattering paint to find your way through a white space is fun and interesting, but splash too much and you'll find yourself in a mostly black world that's just as difficult to navigate. The only problem is you'll have to put up with a few hitches to get there. Discussing the game's final levels here would ruin the sense of discovery and satisfaction that comes with it, but suffice to say that it is at once revelatory, smart, and uplifting. Software description provided by the publisher.This indie game has a few rough edges, but its message about the dangers of hubris and life lived in discontent - cleverly delivered via a dreaming boy coming to grips with his mother's death - leaves an impression that lasts long after the closing credits. It is the result of six years of solo development, dozens of donuts (for research), and one fateful encounter with a raccoon. The hole won’t stop until the whole county is all gone.ĭonut County was created by Ben Esposito, designer on What Remains of Edith Finch and The Unfinished Swan.

You can use it to solve puzzles.or just destroy stuff.



Meet cute characters, steal their trash, and throw them in a hole. Donut County is a story-based physics puzzle game where you play as an ever-growing hole in the ground.
