Less a game than an interactive play, with rare writing and staging. Approach it for the mood and the text, not for challenge or pace, but the impression it leaves is lasting.
Your verdict
Category
Adventure1 player12+
Description
A narrative adventure by Cardboard Computer gathered into a Switch edition by Annapurna Interactive in 2020. Across five acts of magical realism, you follow a delivery driver searching for an address along a mysterious underground highway in Kentucky. A melancholy piece of theater about debt, labor and forgotten America.
Kentucky Route Zero: TV Edition review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
A unique art direction of vector silhouettes, theatrical plays of shadow and compositions worthy of a painting. The graphic minimalism serves a magical-realist atmosphere where every scene evokes a play bathed in half-light.
The music, between American folk, ambient drones and a devastating ballad sung on stage, is integral to the experience. Every piece deepens the magical-realist atmosphere, turning certain scenes into moments of suspended grace.
Masterful writing: poetic branching dialogue, monologues on the edge of theater, ghostly characters sketched in a few lines. The text, closer to literature than to video games, weaves a dreamlike, melancholy America where meaning slips away as much as it offers itself.
An interactive play of rare literary ambition, this cult game remains little known to the wider public. For its masterful writing and magical-realist atmosphere, it's an essential gem for anyone who sees games as a narrative art in their own right.
A questionable morality
Behind its magical realism, the game mounts a muted indictment of debt, worker exploitation and a discarded America. Its characters are ground down by abstract yet all-too-real economic systems, and that social critique remains the story's true engine.