![]() ![]() ![]() There are a few great locations in the game.It has a nice couple of touches to, like the way Sally’s backpack moves when she runs. Actions work well, there’s never any collision detection or unresponsive presses. This is where the horror aspect is at its best, when you know you have limited scope to survive if detected. Although you can fight back to an extent, most of the time you’ll want to avoid them so you’ll spend a lot of time crouching around corners hoping not to be seen. Some of them are genuinely creepy and frightening, particularly ones that look a bit like birds and that classic horror trope the little girl. There are lots of monsters in Gylt, from weird eyes that just stare at you to big bosses.The innocence of it’s young protagonists is a good fit for this combination of parts but unfortunately it doesn’t add up to anything special. However, none of this is really the point – Gylt is actually about the mental effects of bullying and of not standing up for others. ![]() To be fair, a lot of the monsters that have infested Sally’s town are genuinely creepy, and crawling around in the dark is always nerve wracking, even in Gylt’s surroundings. Even the horror aspects are sanitised somewhat: there’s no blood or dead bodies. You play as Sally, a small girl searching for her cousin and graphically the game is quite simple – everything is larger than life and clear. In terms of it’s gameplay, Gylt is a cute-horror-puzzle game. ![]()
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