In defense of cozy games and the wholesome games movement - Los Angeles Times
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A love letter to cozy games, the gentle game movement we need right now

In a video game, a cartoon girl stands among a gray cartoon forest. Icons with various supply items are on either side
In the “Animal Crossing”-inspired “Cozy Grove” we act as therapists, completing short tasks to help out bears in their afterlife who are struggling to move on from trauma.
(Spry Fox / The Quantum Astrophysicists Guild)
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“Cozy Grove” arrived in the spring as an “Animal Crossing”-inspired game with a bittersweet tone, characters struggling with unresolved trauma and bite-sized missions.

Now, it’s become a ritual.

“Cozy Grove,” available for iOS devices, PCs and all major consoles, is often what I reach for first thing in the morning, a pre-coffee digital relaxant to ease into the world of the awake with daily lessons about attempting to live a life free of regrets. Most of the game’s characters are bears, and they’re dead — spirits — many struggling with remorse or shame that’s carried over into their ghostly state.

These bears worry about ailments. They hate the way they look. They wish the living would stop treating them like ghosts rather than fully capable beings. They find out everyone was scared to tell them their baked goods were inedible.

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Yet as anyone who has ever played “Super Mario Bros.” knows, games are metaphors. A treatise on the power of family, the struggle of the 9-to-5, the ability to find surrealism in daily life and a reminder to not give up on true love regardless of the obstacles — that’s the “Mario” message, right?

In “Cozy Grove,” by helping the bears face reality, or sometimes simply the better parts of nostalgia, we heal lost souls. Doing so brings an island paradise to life, populating it with all the colors of a natural, wildlife-inspired spectrum. A bleak world of driftwood becomes a mystical campground, and we advance through the game essentially by building more mindful bears. As in “Animal Crossing,” we craft objects, go fishing and mostly hunt for lost items, but the story progresses simply by listening and becoming something akin to a therapist for the spirits.

It’s thoughtful, a game that, like many released in recent weeks, possesses a healthy conscience. While independent games long ago helped popularize the idea of concocting digital worlds built primarily for exploration, a so-called “wholesome games” movement — led by a social media account and site of the same name — has created a makeshift genre that’s brought more visibility to games in which the joy is uncovering a universe rather than obliterating it, often with ideas on how to be better custodians of our current one.

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A screenshot of a video game shows a cartoon girl standing among a vibrant garden with lots of sunflowers.
By healing its inhabitants, we bring the world of “Cozy Grove” to life.
(Spry Fox / The Quantum Astrophysicists Guild)

At the very least, “Cozy Grove” and other gentle games such as the coloring-book-like adventure “Chicory: A Colorful Tale” and the run-away-from-home fairy tale “The Wild at Heart” are conversational, using gameplay that deviates from running and jumping and pointing and shooting to get players to slow down and engage in an interactive dialogue with what’s on the screen. They’re games that don’t just extend a hand; they feel like a hug.

Across its various social media platforms, Wholesome Games has tallied more than 200,000 community members, and a recent online showcase, Wholesome Direct, provided looks at more than 75 games. They were diverse in genre and style, ranging from “Beasts of Maravilla Island,” a calming and beautiful celebration of mythical animals, which is available now, to the upcoming “Lake,” a game about a woman who quits her fancy job to be a mail carrier.

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“Folks are curious to know ‘why now?’ with regards to an influx of wholesome games,” says Matthew Taylor, independent game developer and founder of Wholesome Games. “As much as I’d love to take the credit, I genuinely think that the desire for these types of games has always existed.”

It turns out games are uniquely tailored to explore love, romance and heartbreak. Consider “Maquette,” “Genesis Noir” and “Journey of the Broken Circle,” interactive conversations that ask players to think about love.

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Taylor and others partly attribute the popularity of Wholesome Games’ online events to some of the same factors that led to the rise in indie games: the proliferation of university video game development programs, lower costs to develop games and the ubiquitousness of mobile games, which turned many of us into gamers and inspired some to be curious about and more deeply investigate the medium. Another factor is the pandemic, with old and new players alike looking for accessible, connective experiences that deemphasize violence.

One more crucial shift is a long overdue acknowledgement that games and their action-focused genre classifications — shooters, platformers, roguelike — have catered to a specific, existing community rather than seeking to more broadly build a new one. Don’t worry if you don’t know what the above genres mean; as others have noted, they don’t tell you much about the game.

“At the end of the day, I think these narratives are interesting and partially true,” says Taylor when asked why an estimated few hundred thousand tuned into this year’s Wholesome Direct. “But they let an industry that’s been catering specifically to young white men for almost its entire existence off the hook.” A wider audience has “always existed. Now the games are finally catching up.”

While the word “wholesome” has generated a debate over genre names and what to include or exclude, the movement feels revolutionary for the game space; unlike film, books or television, game genres have often been defined by what they ask the player to do rather than what they may want the player to feel. “Wholesome,” like the words “punk,” “hip-hop” or “rom-com,” isn’t a brand so much as a welcome mat to someone looking for something to play.

A video game scene shows a cartoon forest with small creatures and a stream with a bridge over it.
The developers of “The Wild at Heart” cite “Where the Wild Things Are” and the animated films of Cartoon Saloon, the Irish studio behind “Wolfwalkers,” as primary influences.
(Moonlight Kids)
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For the Seattle-based Spry Fox team behind “Cozy Grove,” such terminology, particularly the word that graces its game, has become something of a mission statement. “Cozy Grove,” for instance, recently added the ability to hug a bear.

“We’re hoping to take this to the next level and do a large-scale ‘Animal Crossing’-like game that will bring people together and hopefully make them feel less lonely, in addition to feeling cozy,” says studio cofounder David Edery. “The absence of loneliness and coziness are very interrelated. We’re feeling like this is a thing that we want to dedicate ourselves to for the next several years.”

“Cozy Grove,” “The Wild at Heart” and “Chicory” are three of my favorite games of 2021, and one thing they all share is accessibility. I don’t believe in “casual gamers” — play, after all, is the first language we develop as children — but I do believe there are people who see a video game screen and feel overwhelmed. I play “Cozy Grove” on my iPhone since it’s part of the Apple Arcade subscription service, and “The Wild at Heart” and “Chicory” are also games built not just for reflection but for sharing with others.

They’re games that, like the best fairy tales, understand that seriousness and a sense of childlike wonder aren’t mutually exclusive. “Once we realized these characters were going to be ghosts and have past trauma, then it became exciting for us to figure out how to tell that in a way that was cozy,” says Edery. “It’s not a trivial thing. Talking about a character that has survivor’s guilt is not a cozy topic, but the friendship you develop, how you help them, how you walk them through what they’re feeling, that became cozy.”

“The Wild at Heart,” available for PCs and Xbox consoles, has generated comparisons, with good reason, to Nintendo’s “Pikmin” franchise. Players round up a group of helper characters, in this case forest sprites, and call on them to clear paths, carry items or sometimes battle an evil creature until it helpfully disappears. The small studio, whose staff is spread primarily throughout the Pacific Northwest, wanted a tone that was part “Where the Wild Things Are,” and part those of the animated films of Irish studio Cartoon Saloon (“Wolfwalkers”).

In a video game a cartoon boy and girl walk with other creatures through a wintry forest landscape
There’s conflict in “The Wild at Heart,” but it’s not particularly difficult, and battles are nonviolent.
(Moonlight Kids)
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The result: melancholic magical realism. We encounter what could stereotypically be defined as a “crazy cat lady,” only this idealized nomadic figure knows the secrets of nature and inspires the imagination of our young protagonist, Wake. The video-game-obsessed kid with a troubled childhood wants to reconnect with his dad who spends evenings watching old home videos of better days while drinking away his future.

This sounds ... not fun, but that’s only because we speak of games in frivolous language. “The Wild at Heart” is, in fact, a cause to rejoice, and I smile at the details in almost every screen, as well as Wake’s ability to pretend, his desire to trust and his escape into a hidden world of magic that’s in danger of succumbing to the chaos of humanity. Everything in “The Wild at Heart” feels delicate, from Wake’s well-being to the tragic, living fire beings that threaten our health.

Like a “Pikmin” game, one could talk about “The Wild at Heart” for its puzzles or strategy — how one can trigger music, inspire sprites to build bridges or discover new items to build — but it’s really a story about childhood friends learning, through the help of sorcerer-like vagabonds, that our past mistakes don’t have to define the future with those we’ve hurt and those we love if we’re open to learning. And through the outlandish characters and creatures we meet, we remember that for all the troubles in the world there’s whimsy too.

“This was always the story we were going to tell,” says Chris Sumsky, cofounder of “The Wild at Heart” developers Moonlight Kids. “It wasn’t actually a ‘Pikmin’-style game to begin with. ‘Pikmin’ games are awesome, but they don’t have a lot of story. So it became a ‘what if’ scenario. What if you take ‘Pikmin,’ and you wrap it in an actual deep story that people care about? Then you can bring people into the game from the story.”

That’s how “Chicory” hooked me. On the surface, “Chicory,” available for PCs and PlayStation consoles, is an adventure game inspired by “The Legend of Zelda,” in that we travel among forest towns and caves on a quest to heal the land. But it’s also a game about believing in the power of art, the surprise or astonishment that comes from an attempt to draw or paint, and the sometimes paralyzing stress of having to live up to others’ expectations for ourselves.

A video game shows cartoon figures working in a cafe with pastel-colored doodles on the border.
“Chicory” is a game about the power of art — and personal insecurities.
(Finji)

In “Chicory,” we don’t have a weapon; we have a paintbrush. Color has been stripped from the world, and the town’s famous artist, Chicory, has locked herself away in her bedroom, her love of art suddenly vanished. We play as an apprentice, a dog, whose ability to paint hasn’t won the favor of the townfolk, but it doesn’t take crafting a masterpiece to bring color to the world and use our brush to inspire plant and wildlife interactions.

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Many of the animal characters we meet are struggling with depression. One wants to draw with us on a bench, only to then reveal that “something tiny” has sent them into a spiral. Others are unhappy with the look of their living space. Caves can be foreboding, at least until we light them up in a wash of pastels. In “Chicory,” we are asked if we make art for personal growth or for the compliments, and we learn that art heals. The game even has optional drawing lessons, and our canvases populate the land.

“I like to start from a simple, familiar place and let those themes grow organically as a conversation between the characters and gameplay develops,” says “Chicory” creator Greg Lobanov. “I put a lot of emphasis on making sure the characters are reacting honestly to the circumstances the game throws at them. And I always make my games in order, starting at the beginning and making the end last, so that my journey making it mirrors the players’ playing it. It makes it easier to keep it all in my head and maintain that genuineness.”

Especially welcoming is that its difficulty can also be dialed way down, so much so that I skipped any “boss fights,” a gatekeeping relic of early game design in which natural progression is suddenly blocked by a cumbersome challenge. But “Chicory” even turns its difficulty settings into a sense of play — an in-game hint line is essentially a call to the player character’s parents asking for advice.

A digital illustration shows a cartoon frog and dog with a speech bubble saying, "Th-there's something in the woods..."
In “Chicory,” we learn that art heals.
(Finji)

How easy or difficult a game should be remains something of an imprecise science, but I also find it’s the first question asked by anyone who is curious about games but doesn’t regularly play. “There aren’t a lot of options for a chill adventure that isn’t super hard or overly gamified with stats,” says “The Wild at Heart’s” Sumsky. “Our art style certainly affords that. I don’t think anyone looks at this and expects our game to be ultrahard.”

Of course, it should be noted that games under the broad wholesome banner aren’t necessarily antiviolence, even if they don’t use violence as part of their gameplay. “Overboard!” has become one of my go-to mobile titles for short gaming sessions, and this narrative experience starts with an act of extreme violence: A woman in an unhappy marriage tosses her husband into the ocean. We spend the game simply talking to others on the boat, trying to charm our way out of being caught for murder.

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In “Say No! More” we shout the word “no,” but it’s not a weapon so much as enforcement of professional boundaries as we navigate an insufferable work environment and in turn learn the power of self-worth. The game excels because its elongated, exaggerated art style reminds us that the struggles and stresses of the daily grind are not always worth the anxiety they cause.

Wholesome — or cozy — is simply a way to convey a feeling.

“It’s a nonviolent game, first and foremost,” says Edery. “There’s an image you can put in front of someone, and it will be cozy. You’re indoors. A rainstorm is happening outside. You’re holding a warm mug of cocoa. You’re there with three or four other people you care about. That’s cozy. So can you evoke that sense in one of these games? There are things that are wrong, but you’re inside and they’re outside. If those wrong things are infringing on you, you have tools to deal with them that are nonviolent.”

Violence, it appears, has at long last come to be understood as cliche in the game space.

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