Little Red Lie Reviews

A contemporary adventure game about debt, family, and the truth about honesty.
App ID510520
App TypeGAME
Developers
Publishers WZOGI
Categories Single-player, Steam Achievements, Partial Controller Support, Steam Trading Cards
Genres Indie, Adventure
Release Date7 Jul, 2017
Platforms Windows, Mac
Supported Languages English

Little Red Lie
1 Total Reviews
1 Positive Reviews
0 Negative Reviews
Negative Score

Little Red Lie has garnered a total of 1 reviews, with 1 positive reviews and 0 negative reviews, resulting in a ‘Negative’ overall score.

Recent Steam Reviews

This section displays the 10 most recent Steam reviews for the game, showcasing a mix of player experiences and sentiments. Each review summary includes the total playtime along with the number of thumbs-up and thumbs-down reactions, clearly indicating the community's feedback

Playtime: 24 minutes
Honestly not worth it, kind of boring because of the lenghty writing and SO edgy, not the cool way, the depressed teenager edgy.
👍 : 2 | 😃 : 0
Negative
Playtime: 618 minutes
Little Red Lie is a very sad story, and the saddest part of it is that it feels so real. Here's my no spoiler review. The game is about money, it's about some people desperately needing more of it, and some people having more of it than they can spend. The story is told through well paced sequences and the game keeps throwing little surprises in your way to keep things fresh. The pixel art looks fine but the art really shines through the HD drawings that come up on important events. Realisticly drawn images silently blend into the very dark nature of the game that stretches its realism into events and symbolism that goes far beyond the realism it seems to be proud of. It's a very well written story, the kind that we as players don't get to witness very often if at all. What might make you not like this game? The story is mostly linear, and there aren't many decisions you get to make in the game. The writing is dark and texts are long, and it takes its subjects seriously, that might not be for everybody. Know that what you are getting into is more like a thoughtful movie than your everyday game. You are mostly playing to read, and observe the story. I am happy that this game exists, it's not something I thought I would be playing. It's not a game that could exist as a product 10 years ago. These type of themes are a great fit for movies and books but we rarely get to play them. I think this game is important and you should give it a chance. Play an hour of it and you will know if it's your type of game or not.
👍 : 7 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 785 minutes
A brutally honest game, where you play from the perspective of two characters, both lying their way through life, hiding their true selves from their peers to avoid hurt and discomfort of others or of themselves. However, reality eventually catches up. The best feature of this game lies (no pun intended) in its writing. The game manages to get some emotions and relationship issues across that are very hard to put into precise words. Yet, it does so with surgical precision. Its topics include debt, shame, class, sex, emotional and physical abuse, gambling, ageing, death, depression, insecure attachment, and narcissism. But above all, the game tells a story about a deeply flawed society, where the need to meet expectations of society exceeds individual needs, at an astronomical price. The game is very linear with little opportunity to steer the direction, and the choices appear to matter little, so I would classify it as a visual novel, extremely well put together. The artwork is sparing but gorgeous. The game's simple mechanics are very effective at conveying a sense of lack of control, and conveying the dark disparity between the internal and external dialogues. The story really pulled me in, although I had wished for a slightly more well rounded ending for the female character. Given all this, especially if you enjoy a good story, care about mental health, and aren't afraid to do a lot of reading of an extremely well put together narrative whilst playing, I can only highly recommend this game!
👍 : 7 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 293 minutes
There's definitely an audience for this type of narrative; it's brutally nihilistic and dismal. How would I summarise it best - oppressive hyper-realism? It reads like a drama novel, with appropriately long-winded scenes and fitting twists. It seemed a little "miserable for misery's sake" to me, but I'm sure that's exactly what fans of this genre are looking for. However, I would not recommend this to the majority of people looking for a narrative experience. Unless you're a part of the aforementioned audience, I can see this being a slog. Every new turn of the story brought more excruciating hopelessness. Seriously, the game's bursting at the seams with it! I appreciate what was trying to be done but was unable to really enjoy it and found a few scenes difficult to get through, unfortunately. That being said, I did enjoy the way the characters were written. They felt natural and right at home in their, well, depressing world.
👍 : 10 | 😃 : 0
Negative
Playtime: 480 minutes
This really is some of the best writing the medium of gaming has ever seen. I have not read a book, seen a movie, or watched a TV show that honed in on economic dread and all its existential implications so ruthlessly. And although some say it isn't really much of a game, I would disagree. The game format keeps you in a state of soul-numbing complicity with the narrative -- all you can do is spiral down the drain and lie about it, but it's you doing it, and no other medium could make the audience feel this dirty for that. This isn't even a minor masterpiece. It's just a masterpiece.
👍 : 8 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 381 minutes
Game is savage... don't let the people telling you (correctly) that it's a work of art or a great narrative make you think this is some kind of schmaltzy hyper-reflective slow-burn. Nah. This game is punchy as hell. I'm a pretty underread dumbo so bear with me here: it reads like a more mature version of Chuck Palahniuk or Bret Easton Ellis or George Carlin or Aaron Sorkin. Maybe you think those guys are fundamentally dumb, but they're not boring! This game isn't boring, so it avoids the biggest problem that many narrative games have, which is being boring. The characters have acid-tongued inner monologues and it's fun to read even as the actual content of the story makes you grow grey hairs. With some luck, images of this game will end up being posters in some ding-dong's dorm room. I appreciated a lot of aspects of the game but that was what I appreciated the most. I'll leave the rest to the other reviewers. In terms of grievances, I have but two: - Small technical issues. Some bad collision bounds. Some text that should have been red but wasn't. - The story has blanks which the reader is meant to fill in. By the time these came up, the game had proven itself as a trustworthy dissector of modern society. It had the right to fill those blanks in. Anyway it's a real achievement. Speaking of achievements, I finished the game with 3 of the locked, and I really want them, really badly! That means the game is good.
👍 : 19 | 😃 : 1
Positive
Playtime: 807 minutes
Little Red Lie might very well be the best game I've ever played that I cannot recommend. Not because the game isn't good - I thought it was great, in fact - but because the game is simply too depressing. Nowadays people might hear or read that statement and think it's being hyperbolic or melodramatic, presumably because "depressing" games like Celeste and whatnot have become more popular lately. Well, they'd be wrong. Here is the problem: Celeste and similar acclaimed games, albeit a game that is about depression, isn't depressing. What do I mean when I say that? When you play that game you get sad, but only moderately. You feel a kind of melancholy that is just sad enough to keep you playing, just dark enough to allow you to see a little bit of the light at the end of the tunnel. Will O'Neill's games, both this and Actual Sunlight, are not palatable games about depression, they are *depressing* games about depression. They are not like Please Knock on My Door, The Cat Lady, Depression Quest, etc, because these games merely teach you about depression; Actual Sunlight and Little Red Lie will make you *feel* depression. These other games are more like Wikipedia or WebMD articles about depression - they can describe it and can summarize it and present it visually, but they will never make you *feel* depressed. That's what makes Will O'Neill's games so special, but it's also what makes them virtually impossible to recommend, because people only want to experience depression vicariously, not viscerally. His games don't care about getting "artsy" or "deep" about the subject matter at hand. They don't care about making you walk away with something profound you can use to enhance your life - and why would they? Depression, by definition, is not profound. It is not something you can use to enhance your life. That's what I love about his games, because they never overestimate the power or the value of art as some sort of scapegoat proxy to overestimate the value of the artist him or herself. His games implicitly understand that "artistic" depictions of depression are rarely all that depressing, and that ironically ends up sacrificing some of the emotional potency. It is merely a raw and unadulterating abyss, and playing Little Red Lie, bleak and tenebrous as can be, is like diving into an abyss. You do not walk away from this game as you would after watching Inside Out or Bojack Horseman, with a vague and slightly uncomfortable but ultimately welcoming sense of bitter-sweetness. You walk away from Little Red Lie wanting to kill yourself. That's what "games about depression" actually do, and it is for that reason that I cannot recommend it to 99.99% of people. But I still have to give Little Red Lie a thumbs up because at the end of the day it is by far one of the best written games I have ever played. The game and its story are so much more than about hammering you over the head with a bleak, pessimistic, modernist perspective on unyielding income inequality and how it is (currently) intersecting with mental health, eroding social values and trust, and the narcissism of small differences. It is a fantastic psychological dive into two people who, despite never meeting, share so much in common. Sarah, 38, and Arthur, 46, are seemingly two very different people - one a broke and unemployed anxious neurotic and the other a self-aggrandizing sociopath who literally believes that money is the meaning of life - to the point you would expect their interior monologues to be very different from each other in terms of both style and prose, but their soliloquies being near-identical serves an important purpose: showing that they are the same person. How so? That's easy: they're both pathological liars whose fates, personalities, desires, values, beliefs and prejudices have been almost solely determined by their income. In fact, the only meaningful difference between them is that one is poor and one is rich. Swap their financial statuses around and they would effectively have the same personality traits (which just so happens to be almost entirely character flaws). If I have one controversial takeaway from this game, let it be this: The only reason why Sarah is moderately likeable and sympathetic is because she is poor. Imagine someone like her, with all her unjustified idiosyncrasies and incessant catastrophizing, but rich - it's not a pretty picture. That's why she's juxtaposed with Arthur, it's to teach you that money does more than corrupt - money *discloses*. Money *belies*. Money merely *reveals* what was already there. There are things about human nature worse than suffering from over-intellectualized sophistry or undiagnosed panic attacks, and that's what Sarah and Arthur are there to teach you. The game also introduces some very out-of-left-field 4th wall-breaking shenanigans that are very reminiscent of Undertale or The Stanley Parable, but even this aspect is fresh and unique because unlike these two examples, Little Red Lie (for the most part) upholds an intense veneer of realism, which only makes the contrast between the two main characters and the mystery narrator from the realm of magical realism (?) even more fascinating. The great tragedy about Little Red Lie is that even though it is so hard to recommend, it must be recommended to as many people as possible. The subject matter is undeniably some of the most relevant and topical that any video game has ever tackled, and while it doesn't really dive into new territory (many books and movies about the 2008 financial crisis and its aftermath already exist, as an easy example), the quality of the characters and the writing offers a fresh perspective on intergenerational strife and poverty that virtually anyone on the planet over the age of 15 would appreciate, if it weren't for the immoderately fatalistic outlook of the plot. I think back on games other people have called "very bleak" or "incredibly dark" and they usually end up being games that take place in some fantasy or unrealistic/futuristic setting like The Last Of Us 2, but what really makes Little Red Lie dark is that it is so realistic, in fact its biggest issue is that it is *too* realistic to handle, but that realism is precisely what needs to be handled if anyone wants a chance at enduring these kinds of problems should they ever happen. And, while this may be a sentiment many people won't see eye-to-eye with me on, I really respect the mere fact that Little Red Lie held back no punches. It was actually refreshing to see a story, particularly one in a video game of all places, examine the complex, interweaving and dynamic whirlwind of poverty, mental illness, familial stress, narcissism, suicide, rape, unbridled corporatism and financially-based maladaptive daydreaming and bring it all to its intense and extreme crescendo of a logical conclusion - a world in which everyone admits, even if only internally and privately, even if they have the typical powers that come with being a multi-millionaire, that few can wield the most dangerous thing among all: Truth.
👍 : 12 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 488 minutes
I just finished playing Little Red Lie and ho-ly ****. I've played a lot of serious games with really strong narratives. Seen writing of all quality in games that express my generation's fears and frustration with what we have to contend with. None of them spoke to me on such a visceral level as Little Red Lie did. While not a 1:1 analogy of my own life, I found myself in tears at several points of the game because of how much it mirrored things I lived through. I've been poor. I've been wealthy. I'm very fortunate to be comfortable right now. Went through the awkwardness of seeing a friend who once treated me to coffee now washing dishes...and the icy fear of seeing clients from my very last professional sector job in their homes when I had to take a sharing economy gig to pay my bills. I identify with Sarah's character a lot. While I'm a tad younger, I see so many of my past behaviors before I got treated for depression. The strained relationship with her sister, worrying about being her sole provider someday. I was totally transfixed because it felt like my life was suddenly on a screen. Play this now if you want a hard-hitting narrative that might hit REALLY close to home if you're stuck between Millenial and Gen X/older Millennial. It reminded me of why I went through everything I survived to become a game developer. To hang onto that hope despite the world of **** our generation got stuck with, and tell the stories that need to be told.
👍 : 84 | 😃 : 2
Positive
Playtime: 348 minutes
I bought this game because I loved (if that's the right word) the developer's previous game, Actual Sunlight. Similar to Actual Sunlight, LRL is a narrative-based game with minimal choice and interactivity. However, the game uses this limited interactivity very carefully, allowing you to pace the game as you want and explore as much of the character's inner thoughts as possible. The game is an exceptionally well-written exploration of debt, capitalism, family and mental illness. I'm not sure I agree with its uncompromising nihilism, which at times can come across as a bit of a rant. But everything is written with such flare that this doesn't become an irritant, even over the 6 hours of play it took to finish. At least for me, the writing was constantly challenging my expectations and making me challenge the characters, the game, and my own prejudices. So I may be coming down too hard on the nihilism - the ending of the game left me wanting to say "screw you, game, I'm better than that." It's difficult to know which responses are intentional and which are just my own unique response to the game - by my consideration, a good test for a complex piece of art. All in all, a highly recommended game. I feel like I ought to revisit it in the way you revisit a great book. Unlike most games, I feel there are still many depths to plumb in this story before I feel I adequately understand or appreciate everything the author has tried to do.
👍 : 29 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 730 minutes
[h1]Money is the most important thing[/h1] What a weird (in a good way) and a wonderful hidden gem this game is. Red Little Lie won't put you in a good mood, it's dark and depressive, just like the real world. I don't know if you can call it a game, it's more of a novel and a misanthropic take on the pathetic world we're living in. The game is about lying, lying to others (sometimes to make them feel better), to yourself, living the pointless life. What can I say, it shows the true nature of humans and how shitty the life and world are. People are selfish beings who lie every day. There are many topics discussed in this game, depression and different people having different problems in life and for each of them their problems seem the worst and they might look ridiculous to others. People feeling worthless or better than anyone else. Money is all people care about, people judge you by how much you earn, what job you have, what expensive stuff you buy, but are they really happier than the poor? Are they happy just because they feel better than the poor ones who are suffering and that's what is keeping them alive, they feel happy about someone's failure, someone's tragedy. But at the same time they have nothing, they're empty inside, they lie to others, they fool themselves to feel better and they're lying to themselves, trying to fill that void with expensive stuff and full pockets of money, a successful career, but in the end they're just lonely empty shells. Poor people on the other hand, are they really that different? They lie too, they don't care about anything but themselves, their purpose in life is to chase that dream they can never catch and then they feel miserable until they die. In the end everyone is after the money and they'll do anything to get more money. All they want in life is to sell their souls and imagine they're happy then. That's what the game made me think about. Gameplay is simple, you walk around, interact with some stuff around you and lie about it. There's lots of reading and there's lots of pure text on black background. But it works wonderfully, this game is a work of art and a food for thought. Graphically there's not a lot to say about this game. Just some 2D backgrounds and black screens with some great looking artworks from time to time. Speaking about sound design, dialogues and monologues aren't voiced, but music is fantastic. This game is definitely not for everyone. If you enjoy darker themes and fucked up stories, this is a great choice. If you like this one you should check another game by the same developer - Actual Sunlight. It's shorter and not as good but still a decent game. I wouldn't advise to play any these games if you're having lots of suicidal thoughts, better seek help. [b]Pros[/b] [list] [*]Great storytelling [*]Dark and misanthropic [*]Nice soundtrack [*]Makes you think [/list] [b]Cons[/b] [list] [*]- [/list] [url=https://store.steampowered.com/curator/32930811-Kosmos%27s-Cosmic-reviews/?appid=704030][h1]Follow my curator page for more[/h1][/url]
👍 : 57 | 😃 : 0
Positive
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