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Recommended
0.0 hrs last two weeks / 6.2 hrs on record (4.2 hrs at review time)
Posted: Aug 14, 2015 @ 1:01pm
Updated: Dec 27, 2021 @ 6:12pm

To the Moon is not your typical shooting game with super real ultra realistic graphics, and hyper-threaded animations, but instead it has an emotional story that reaches the hearts of each individual that plays it.

If before dying you could make a wish, what would you do to get it? That is the question that they ask us through a story starring two scientists, Eva Rosalene and Neil Watts, who are capable of entering people's minds with the aim of implanting "artificial memories" that they make them relive, even in the world of dreams, their most cherished desires.

John, a sick man about to die, decides the help of these two scientists in order to fulfill his dream, travel to the Moon. At first the reasons for his desire are unknown, even Jhon himself clarifies that he does not know why his dream is that one and not another, but throughout the game and traveling through the different memories and dreams we will understand their motivations and we will identify with many things.

The journey through the mind of Jhon is carried out with an inverse plot, we start with his old age memories and we will go backwards until we reach childhood.

In the style of the classic Japanese role-playing adventures of the nineties, To the Moon is a game that lasts approximately 5-6 hours and that will also make us cry, make us laugh and feel different emotions in such a short time thanks to its story that is so immersive and humane.

If there is one thing I am sure of, it is that this game is capable of bringing tears to any person.

How important are graphics, when the story and soundtrack are just perfect?

Super Recommended. 10/10
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