Skip to main content

We played Tribeca Fest’s 2023 game selections and walked away amazed

Summer Gaming Marathon Feature Image
This story is part of our Summer Gaming Marathon series.

You’d think that after spending four days at Summer Game Fest playing dozens of games (including heavy-hitters like Mortal Kombat 1 and Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown) that we’d be a little demoed-out. But nothing rejuvenates my excitement about video games more than playing innovative indies that are unlike anything I’ve ever seen before. That’s exactly what this year’s Tribeca Fest delivered this year, with seven eye-catching games that were playable at the festival.

This year’s selections are a diverse bunch of games hailing from studios all around the world; the list included titles from Australia, Ecuador, and even Qatar. It isn’t just their countries of origin that makes them stand out though. Each title on display this year is entirely unique, offering a wide range of play experiences that prove how much more ground there is to break within the medium.

I attended this year’s Tribeca Fest and went hands-on with the selections. Despite having just spent a long weekend playing dozens of games, I was still wowed. From a first-person soccer game with an astonishing art style to a phenomenal puzzle game about decoding foreign languages, you should make sure to keep all of these games on your radar.

Chants of Sennaar

A character overlooks a desert in Chants of Sennaar.
Focus Interactive

If you’ve always wished you could recapture the experience of playing Return of the Obra Dinn for the first time, Chants of Sennaar is for you. Published by Focus Interactive, the colorful adventure has players navigating a foreign world filled with languages they don’t understand. The hook here is that players need to decode what every symbol they come across means and record them in a notebook. In an opening puzzle, I found a lever with some symbols at its up and down positions. I hypothesized that those symbols might translate to “Up pull” and “down pull,” marking my guess down in my notebook. I’d later realize they actually meant “open door” and “close door” by seeing those symbols used in a different context. It’s an ingenious idea that had me using logic to decode languages with very little information to go on. With a September 5 release date planned, Chants of Sennaar could be a sleeper hit for me come “game of the year” season.

Goodbye Volcano High

Fang, Trish, and Reed playing in Worm Drama band
KO_OP

I’ve had my eye on Goodbye Volcano High ever since it was revealed during a PlayStation stream. How could I not be intrigued by the idea of a high school coming-of-age story about punk-rocking dinosaurs facing extinction? The demo I played at Tribeca Fest only validated that curiosity. I only got a quick glimpse of the story, which focused on its visual novel elements specifically, but I’m already charmed by its witty writing and lovable dino-teens. It seems like developer KO_OP is telling a relatable young adult story here about kids struggling to grow up in a world that feels like its ending. It’s a narrative that feels especially prescient in a world where the threat of climate change can make it difficult to see a future worth fighting for.

Despelote

Julien kicking a soccer ball in Despelote.
Panic

Despelote is the kind of game that could catch anyone’s eye from across the room. That’s thanks to its alluring art style which drapes its environments in a purple and orange filter. But there’s much more to it than that. Despelote is a slice-of-life tale about a soccer-obsessed eight-year-old growing up in Quito during Ecudor’s 2001 World Cup run. During my demo, I’d explore the city in first-person, stopping to kick balls around with my friends and strangers. It isn’t just a game about soccer, though. As I live out my soccer dreams, I catch adults in the background talking about some of the political struggles facing the country. Or at least I think I do. I’m too busy kicking to catch it all, and that seems to be the point. Despelote seems to show an honest depiction of childhood, where the high stakes of the real world become background noise to innocent kids.

The Expanse: A Telltale Series

Zero-G exploration in The Expanse: A Telltale Series.
Telltale Games

We didn’t go hands-on with the 90-minute demo of The Expanse: A Telltale Series at Tribeca Fest, but that’s only because we’d played it a few weeks before. From that experience, we know exactly how the upcoming sci-fi game became an official selection. Telltale’s latest is shaping up to be its most ambitious narrative game yet, with zero gravity movement and impactful choices. It’s a thoughtful adaptation of the sprawling sci-fi series, one that shows that Telltale is ready to reclaim its crown as a leading developer in the narrative adventure space. As Tomas Franzese wrote in his preview for the game, “The Expanse demonstrates that by choosing the right IPs and getting the most potential possible out of them, narrative adventure games can feel just as intriguing and tense as something like Dead Space.”

Nightscape

A character raises her hand towards the sky in Nightscape.
Mezan Studios

Out of all the selections featured this year, Nightscape has the most intriguing backstory. It comes from Mezan Studios, a small development team based in Qatar. The title is a 2.5D platformer where players call on the power of the constellations to traverse a darkened world. I spoke to Mezan founder Hamad Al-Khater at the show, who explained that Qatar has an almost non-existent development scene, despite the fact that the country has a massive gaming audience. His team hopes to change that with Nightscape, but the game also seeks to provide better representation of the Middle East, as the area tends to just become fodder for war games like Call of Duty in mainstream media. With a story rooted in ancient Arabian stories, Nightscape seems like it’ll offer a change in narrative that the video game industry desperately needs to see.

A Highland Song

Moira crosses a bridge in A Highland Song.
Inkle / inkle

Developer Inkle isn’t a household name, but the studio is responsible for some of the most intriguing indies out there, including Heaven’s Vault and 80 Days. Its next game, A Highland Song, takes players on a gorgeous adventure through the Scottish Highlands. While the demo playable at Tribeca Fest doesn’t give a full picture of the game outside of its “open platforming” system, I had a lovely time soaking in its picaresque visuals and learning about its fiercely independent protagonist, Moira. Considering Inkle’s track record, all of that is more than enough to keep me interested in A Highland Song.

Stray Gods: The Role-Playing Musical

Grace stands before Greek Gods in Stray Gods: A Role-Playing Musical.
Humble Games

There are tons of music-based video games, but I can’t say there are many straight-up musicals. That’s going to change with Stray Gods: The Role-Playing Musical. The upcoming indie is a visual novel murder mystery story about Greek gods and musical theater, which is quite the pitch. I’d get to see 30 minutes of the unique indie at Tribeca Fest, getting a feel for its colorful world and dialogue choices systems. But more importantly, I’d get to hear a few of its original songs. The few numbers I heard were unabashedly theatrical, moving the story along through the power of song. While the slice I played was very light on actual player interaction, I did have the power to shape where those songs went lyrically and that alone is an impressive feat. If you want to see it for yourself, you won’t have to wait long. Stray Gods: The Role-Playing Musical launches on August 3.

Editors' Recommendations

Giovanni Colantonio
Giovanni is a writer and video producer focusing on happenings in the video game industry. He has contributed stories to…
Try these 6 excellent, free PC game demos during Steam Next Fest
A train passes a windmill in Station to Station

Every couple of months, Valve holds a Steam Next Fest event on Steam. During that time, lots of indie developers briefly release demos of their upcoming titles to gain more in-development feedback on their games and build some prelaunch hype for the titles. We love trying out some of these games and rounding up our favorites each time a Steam Next Fest rolls around. This year, we've already talked about how two climbing game demos really stuck out to us, but that's not all that's worth checking out.
There were six more indie game demos that we tried and fell in love with during the June 2023 Steam Next Fest. From a sci-fi hospital sim that's full of character to a game about cleaning up trash and gunk underwater, these are six of our favorite Steam Next Fest games that you should check out before the event ends at 10 a.m. PT on June 26.
Saltsea Chronicles

The latest game from Mutazione and Sportsfriends developer Die Gute Fabrik, Saltsea Chronicles is an adventure game about the motley crew of a ship looking for their captain throughout a flooded world. Digital Trends actually had the chance to try the demo early at Summer Game Fest Play Days this year. We came away impressed with its witty writing and gorgeous art, and we were even surprisingly good at its optional card game called Spoils. If you're a fan of adventure games, definitely give this demo a shot.
Saltsea Chronicles is in development for Nintendo Switch, PC, and PlayStation 5. It will be released sometime later this year. 
Loddlenaut

Read more
You have to try these two climbing game demos during Steam Next Fest
A character scales a mountain in Jusant.

There are currently a ton of great game demos to try in the wake of this month's plethora of gaming showcases, but there are two specific titles that should be on your list right now during Steam Next Fest: Jusant and Surmount. While these two titles come from different developers, they share a premise. Both games are about climbing. The basics of their controls are similar, asking players to use the triggers or bumpers to grab surfaces, emulating the feeling of clamping down a hand.

Despite those high-level similarities, the games are almost entirely different in execution. Jusant is a slow-paced, atmospheric, and realistic 3D climbing game, while Surmount focuses on its cartoonish aesthetics, co-op play, and wacky physics that let players swing and fling themselves around from a 2D perspective. I'm not here to recommend one over the other; no, playing both of these demos reaffirmed my appreciation for more creative games from smaller development teams, which tend to find the most creative ways to extrapolate on the simplest of ideas.
How to climb
Jusant -- which was revealed during the Xbox Games Showcase -- is developed and published by Don't Nod, the French studio behind the Life is Strange series and the recently released Harmony: The Fall of Reverie. It's a bit bigger than a true indie studio, but this is still shaping up to be a smaller, more experimental project for the company. If you know Don't Nod, you also won't be surprised to hear that Jusant is more of a lore-heavy, contemplative adventure. It takes place in a world almost devoid of water, where a young boy has found a water-like creature called Ballast and is trying to take it to the top of a gigantic tower, rising into the sky from what was once a sea floor.

Read more
Sorry Starfield, but Chants of Sennaar is now my most anticipated September game
A hand flips over a card in Chants of Sennaar.

For the past five years, I’ve been chasing the high I felt the first time I played Return of the Obra Dinn. Lucas Pope’s hit deduction game is unlike anything I’ve ever played, making me feel like a total genius in ways few other games have. The puzzler tasks players with exploring a pirate ship full of dead bodies and piecing together who everyone is and what happened to them. It feels impossible at first due to how little information you have, but finds ingenious ways to lead players to the correct solutions through context clues. No game since has nailed that winning design philosophy in the same way … but Chants of Sennaar may be the game to finally do it.

Chants of Sennaar - Release Date Reveal Trailer

Read more