A short experience telling the story of an Indian-Canadian family through cooking. Preparing South Indian dishes anchors a tale of immigration and belonging. Warm, flavorful, and easily finished in one evening.
Your verdict
Category
Adventure1 player3+
Description
A Tamil family settled in Canada cooks the dishes of home to keep the thread of memory alive. Published by Visai, released worldwide in 2023. Hands-on preparation of South Indian recipes, a family story about immigration, identity and what passes between generations.
Venba review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
A warm graphic novel in spice-toned hues: rounded illustrations, an ochre-and-gold palette and Indian cooking drawn with love. This visual gentleness, intimate and generous, turns the passing-down of a family recipe into a colourful embrace that warms the heart.
Through dishes simmered on screen, the story of an Indian immigrant family in Canada unfolds, between recipes handed down and the gulf between generations. Cooking becomes a language: of a mother's love, of exile, of an identity one keeps or loses. This short, luminous chronicle moves through its tenderness and the memories it revives with every scent of spice.
Cooking becomes an act of memory here: recreating South Indian dishes, gesture by gesture, to keep a Tamil family's thread alive in exile. Short and largely challenge-free, it may have put off those hunting for a "game" in the classic sense. Yet its story of immigration and inheritance lands true, carried by warm staging. Worth discovering for anyone who loves intimate stories that leave a mark.
Is Venba still worth playing in 2026?
Venba proves that an hour of play can linger longer than many endless productions. The gestural preparation of Tamil dishes threads a story about immigration, identity and the bond between a mother and her son. Restoring recipes faded by time becomes a tangible metaphor for family memory. The game is very short and its mechanics stay simple, so judge it for what it is, an interactive short story rather than a deep cooking title. On that ground it keeps a sincerity and a sureness of writing that have lost none of their force today.