Pain sailing

If you want to see a sunken city, then
you’re spoilt for choice when it comes to games. First and foremost,
there’s the underwater metropolis of Rapture, in BioShock, an art deco dream whose bubble burst at the bottom of the North Atlantic. More recently, there’s Oakmont, in The Sinking City, but, true to its name, it was only half submerged. Which brings us, of course, to Submerged,
a sunlit vision of the world’s watery end. Into this flood comes Sea of
Solitude, made by Jo-Mei Games and published by EA. On the surface, it
centres on a girl named Kay, who boats about in a half-drowned Berlin.
But it isn’t long before the game’s title sinks in, and you realise that
you are, in fact, piloting the choppy waves of metaphor, more than
water, as Kay’s quest unravels.
The game opens with a message from the game’s writer, and art and
creative director, Cornelia Geppert: ‘Sea of Solitude is a personal
project about loneliness inspired by my own experiences.’ The camera
sweeps above the waters and looms over a drifting boat, in which sleeps
Kay. She’s a sight to behold: her eyes glow red, her body is black, and
her arms and legs are feathered, giving her the oily look of a beached
bird. It’s a fitting design, and the subtlest storytelling in the
game; our heroine is marooned, smothered by a downward-dripping mood.
But then ‘“Hope” is the thing with feathers,’ as Emily Dickinson wrote,
able to reach us even ‘on the strangest Sea.’ So perhaps we are given
the glint of a way out.
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‘Where did all this water come from?’ Kay wonders aloud. ‘And what
happened to the people?’. It’s a good question, and one we’re left to
ponder, with Kay offering up some novel suggestions: ‘This has got to be
a dream, right?’ (Maybe so, but what then of the bottled messages
scattered throughout, as if others might inhabit the same space?) As is
par for the course with this sort of game – think Celeste, Gris, or The Gardens Between
– obstacles and puzzles are as symbolic as they are logistic: problems
are mountains, moods are colours, and clues are manifested memories. Kay
wears a bright orange backpack, which she uses – just like a
Ghostbuster – to gulp up globs of ‘corruption’ that ooze through the
air. When they appear, the clouds and waters are inked with darkness;
when they are banished, all turns sunny and still.
If it is a dream, it's periodically a very pleasant one,
especially in the game’s early moments, spent in gentle exploration. ‘It
reminds me of Venice,’ Kay says, as she motors gently down the streets,
her boat leaving a frothing wake of white. As you gaze overboard, you
see the bottom halves of cafés and apartments blue and rippling below,
and you feel not only the dark, secret pleasure of catastrophe but the
double joy, which games are unsurpassed in their power to infuse, of
seeing the old from new and unexpected angles – the world from a
different height, cast in alien colours. The reason The Last of Us
dazzled me had as much to do with seeing buildings in a losing battle
against grass and creepers. Likewise, to feel the slosh and slap of
water in places it was never meant to be is perversely compelling.
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I only wish Geppert, in her admirable mission to transform her own
isolation into art, would trust us to do our own navigating. It isn’t as
if the game’s depths are that difficult to fathom. Monsters patrol
beneath the boat, bearing a resemblance to Kay – the same red eyes aglow
and the skin as impenetrably black; they chastise, and chisel at her
confidence, beckoning her to throw herself in. Some are monstrous forms
of her loved ones – taking on their voices – and we really don’t need
Kay’s commentary: ‘Wait… that monster… It seems… familiar!’ Later on,
Kay asks, ‘How are you supposed to stop helping and start letting go?’
which sounds less like dialogue and more like a chapter from a pamphlet
on parenting. Is the image of a girl cut adrift from her family and
pulled by the current of seclusion not powerful enough?
Still, it isn’t all plain sailing. There are stretches of simple
platforming, in which you avoid the water for the monsters that lurk and
yearn for your flesh. There are portions in which the sea level lowers,
as if the plug has been tugged free, allowing you to wander on dry
ground. Much of your mission revolves around the flying figure of a
girl, wrapped in a flapping yellow raincoat, whose spirit is split and
scattered into darting sprites. As you clear the corruption that
wreathes these glowing orbs, your backpack bulges – a visual flourish
signifying Kay’s habit of taking on the burdens of others. I couldn’t
help but chuckle and be reminded of Psychonauts,
whose writer, Tim Schafer, wisely made light of such heavy symbolism,
labelling the collectible suitcases that abound the brains of your
subjects ‘Emotional Baggage.’
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It may be churlish to hope for such levity in a game as guilt-laden
and sombre as Sea of Solitude, and, it must be said, wading through its
drama does yield treasures of insight. For one thing, the bruised
portrait of a family takes shape, its internal stresses deftly etched
through snippets of past conversations and painful recollections. It’s a
relief to see Geppert wisely sidestep any notion of ‘winning’ in this
world; when you reach a resolution with each monster, transforming them
back to human form, you can no longer understand their words – a
terrific touch, as though the freed cannot rouse the afflicted from
their solitary state. Each moment of clarity and uplift is tugged back
down by the drumming of self-doubt: ‘But Kay, ask yourself, why are you
still a monster… ?’
This wavelike churning of mood gives Sea of Solitude the feel of a
fantasia. And it’s filled with compelling pictures – I’ll not soon
forget the sea parting like a pair of endlessly cascading curtains, nor
the fear that they might close on me as I crept through. But its world
doesn’t quite cohere. Think of Rime,
another game about remote souls cast out to sea; that game’s coded
meanings shuffled softly into place, like the tumblers in a lock. While
Submerged, for all its shortfalls (and it isn’t anywhere near the game
Sea of Solitude is) was anchored in the bleak and beautiful reality of a
ruined future. By comparison, what we have here feels intangible and
interior. It’s not so much thought-provoking as thought-insistent, as if
Geppert is all too keen to keep us close, terrified we might not drift
back to her.
Developer: Jo-Mei Games
Publisher: Electronic Arts
Available on: Xbox One [reviewed on], PlayStation 4, and PC
Release Date: July 5, 2019
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