No Bard Feelings
PC Gamer US Edition|January 2019

Dance Like Nobody’s Watching In Wandersong.

Phil Savage
No Bard Feelings

If you press ‘alt’ at any time while playing Wandersong, you’ll do a little dance. As you travel across the world, you’ll repeatedly run into a character who teaches you new dances—new ways to rhythmically gyrate. There is no reason for this. At no point are you required to dance. But you will—and I did—because in Wandersong you’re encouraged to just… go for it. To express yourself and have fun interacting with the world and with your character.

Wandersong is charming from the off. I was walking to-and-from the main village of the first act, and, without really needing to—without there being a puzzle to solve or character to impress—I started singing. Wandersong is a game about singing. Move the mouse (or the control pad’s right analogue stick) in one of eight directions, and you’ll sing a different note. Throughout the game, you will use this central interaction in many enjoyable and surprising ways.

You’ll also use it because it’s there. And because it’s fun to fill the space in which you’re traveling with music and dance. Because the cheerful soundtrack begs to be filled in with your transient musical doodling. Because Wandersong is delightful and lets you embody a cheerful doofus who can’t help but sing.

This story is from the January 2019 edition of PC Gamer US Edition.

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This story is from the January 2019 edition of PC Gamer US Edition.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.