PC GAMER (US)

Everything

From atoms to galaxies, Everything is an unforgetta­ble journey.

- By Andy Kelly

Aswarm of beetles dance together in swirling concentric circles. A blade of grass gets existentia­l. A birthday cake regrets not getting to know its father more before he died. A trumpet flies through a surreal void playing a distorted tune for an audience of floating eyeballs. These are just a few of the things I witnessed in Everything, a game that takes you on a surreal, dreamlike voyage from the microscopi­c to the macroscopi­c. I start things off as a snow leopard roaming across a peaceful snowfield littered with trees, rocks, and other wildlife. I see a group of penguins ahead, and I call out to them, and a symbol blinks on the screen indicating that I can now descend. I do so and find myself controllin­g one of the penguins, waddling and squeaking. Then I descend further, to a tuft of grass poking out of the snow. I descend even lower, to a feather lying on the ground.

I float around as the feather, and can see my penguin in the distance, hazy and indistinct, now the size of a skyscraper. But I can go deeper. I descend to a splinter of wood. Then a microbe. I’m now swimming around in a microscopi­c soup of bacteria, spores, and tiny organisms.

But now it’s time to ascend. I retrace my steps until I’m in control of the snow leopard again. I ascend to a tall oak tree, then suddenly I’m in control of the entire continent, drifting across the ocean. I ascend even higher, controllin­g the planet, then the sun, then the galaxy it’s in. The sense of scale is incredible, and the seamless journey from microbe to galaxy is both technicall­y impressive and strangely humbling.

Everything you inhabit in the game, whether it’s an animal, an inanimate object, or a subatomic particle, can be moved around. And as you explore the world around you, be it a forest, desert, ocean, or the depths of space, you’ll see icons that will trigger conversati­ons. Some are funny—the game has a charming, mischievou­s sense of humor—while others are melancholy, reflective, and surprising­ly emotional.

On your journey you’ll also discover audio recordings of the late philosophe­r Alan Watts, whose sober, thought-provoking rumination­s on the nature of existence give the game some thematic and intellectu­al weight. And there’s something serene about the way his reassuring voice mingles with the dreamy ambient soundtrack as you meander through the world.

There’s a collection element to Everything, too. Every object you control is added to a vast, evergrowin­g library, and you can instantly transform into anything you’ve previously inhabited. In general, though, the structure is pretty loose. There’s no driving purpose, and it doesn’t really need one.

I was content to just float around aimlessly, experiment­ing with the simulation and looking for new things to take control of. It’s a gentle, ambient experience. Something to swim peacefully around in. You can even sit back and let the game play itself. Let go of the controls, and the AI will take over, with the option to choose which activities it focuses on.

DREAM STATE

A few hours in, the game encourages you to travel through a portal. You don’t have to, but you absolutely should. It whisks you away to a strange new world where the rules of the simulation are rewritten, creating some truly bizarre moments. I’ll leave it at that. Discovery and surprise are an important part of Everything’s peculiar magic.

There’s a lot you can do in the game that I haven’t mentioned here. Objects can interact with each other in interestin­g ways, which you unlock as you progress through a lightweigh­t, unobtrusiv­e tutorial. It’s an odd, bewilderin­g game, but gives you space to get to grips with it at your own pace.

Honestly, I didn’t like Everything much at first. I thought it was slightly pretentiou­s, and a bit dull and ponderous. But after a slow-burning first hour, when I started ascending through the cosmos and descending into the microscopi­c building blocks of life, I fell in love with it. It makes you think about life and your place in the universe, but it’s silly and playful too, which is a combinatio­n that shouldn’t work as well as it does.

Discovery and surprise are an important part of the game’s peculiar magic

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