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Not come across alot of games that touch on life and death like this one, there is alot to be said and discussed, but foremost i recommend anyone to just play through it, a good 35 hours to finish it here and there's still more to do, i really enjoyed the gameplay aspect and just sailing the world, i hope they make more content for it.
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Demitrix2k: Not come across alot of games that touch on life and death like this one, there is alot to be said and discussed, but foremost i recommend anyone to just play through it, a good 35 hours to finish it here and there's still more to do, i really enjoyed the gameplay aspect and just sailing the world, i hope they make more content for it.
Thank you for your thoughts about the game.
It was really something else.
(Eh, I kinda did a store review for it, so there's little need to go over everything again).

The game really did "hit me in the feels", as they say, without feeling sappy, overtly melodramatic or hamming up any "oh woe is me!"-angle. It's just regular folks; the fact that they're shown as animal spirits somehow makes it easier to relate to them, at least for me.
Many of the characters reminded me of (late) family members, or people which I knew in the past but lost track of. They're so very relatable. Which is probably why losing them did hurt. It's not the game, it's not the game's story, it's the memories it brought back that were painful.

Death is inevitable. No one made it off this planet alive yet.

Reflecting on my own past, I can say that Spiritfarer left me a sad but wiser man. And that's quite a feat. Getting someone to reflect upon a topic where my usual reaction can be summed up as "Run !".
Definitly not a game for everyone, but a beautiful game nonetheless.
Finished this fantastic game a few days ago. Such a gem