'A Memoir Blue' is a lovely video game exploration of a mother-daughter relationship
by Todd Martens, Los Angeles Times
Apr 19, 2022
4 minutes
"A Memoir Blue" starts with a phone call. It's a vibrating ring we won't answer, at least not right away, though we can move the cursor to mimic a swipe. In this game, the communication is internal, a dialogue between the player and a character lost in thought. Soon, the young woman we've just met will be drowning in a family room full of water, a house that's been turned into a fishbowl. Grab a boombox, smash the floor, and shortly we're on a train.
Reality is abstracted in the settings of "A Memoir Blue." The emotions, however, are grounded.
"A Memoir
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