
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of Pixelated Playgrounds, Bryan and Josh dive into and Roger, a short but emotionally powerful experience from developer TearyHand Studio. Initially framed as a horror story, the game follows a girl who wakes to find a stranger in her home, with disorienting minigames and high-contrast visuals amplifying her fear and confusion. They discuss the game’s unusual narrative delivery, its WarioWare-like micro-interactions, minimal text, and evocative sound design. What begins as a tense mystery gradually reveals deeper questions about the protagonist, hinting at something more intimate than danger.
Later on they explore how the game’s story revelations transforms earlier gameplay into poignant commentary through mechanics rather than exposition. Its notable that while the game concludes with a Bible verse, its message remains universal, human, and deeply felt. And Roger is a memorable, compassionate experience less about fun and more about understanding, which showcases how interactive storytelling can reframe emotions in a remarkable way.
Notes:
Florence
One of 2025's Best Games, And Roger, Is About God, Love, and Loss (Patrick Klepek, Remap)
Three Word Reviews:
Bryan - Revelation and Reframing
Josh - Confusion and Uncertainty
By Pixelated Playgrounds4.6
2828 ratings
In this episode of Pixelated Playgrounds, Bryan and Josh dive into and Roger, a short but emotionally powerful experience from developer TearyHand Studio. Initially framed as a horror story, the game follows a girl who wakes to find a stranger in her home, with disorienting minigames and high-contrast visuals amplifying her fear and confusion. They discuss the game’s unusual narrative delivery, its WarioWare-like micro-interactions, minimal text, and evocative sound design. What begins as a tense mystery gradually reveals deeper questions about the protagonist, hinting at something more intimate than danger.
Later on they explore how the game’s story revelations transforms earlier gameplay into poignant commentary through mechanics rather than exposition. Its notable that while the game concludes with a Bible verse, its message remains universal, human, and deeply felt. And Roger is a memorable, compassionate experience less about fun and more about understanding, which showcases how interactive storytelling can reframe emotions in a remarkable way.
Notes:
Florence
One of 2025's Best Games, And Roger, Is About God, Love, and Loss (Patrick Klepek, Remap)
Three Word Reviews:
Bryan - Revelation and Reframing
Josh - Confusion and Uncertainty

78,791 Listeners

4,096 Listeners

3,930 Listeners

2,797 Listeners

4,841 Listeners

5,666 Listeners

368 Listeners

5,698 Listeners

311 Listeners

20 Listeners

1,164 Listeners

5,587 Listeners

16,487 Listeners

10,891 Listeners

0 Listeners