The Indie Road Map (Part 1)

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Thursday, September 09, 2010
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Dan "Shoe" Hsu

Indie Game Magazine's Mike Gnade returns with his second column for Bitmob. This month, he gives us several under-the-radar recommendations to check out.

Now that you know what makes an indie game indie, it’s time to delve deeper into the genre.This month we’re going on a road trip across the Internet to discover all the great indie gaming content that you’ve been missing. We don’t have time to cover every title out there alphabetically (if you want that, check out The Indie Scene: A-Z), but there are some essential stops along the way. Below you will find a roadmap and travel guide for your indie journey.

Part 1: Essential Indie Freebies


Cave Story (cavestory.com)

Cave Story Wii

Cave Story is the quintessential indie Metroidvania game. It was designed and programmed over five years by Daisuke “Pixel” Amaya in his free time and released in 2004 for the PC. It’s got sweet pixel graphics, a memorable story, and classic gameplay. If you owned an NES, you have to try this game. There’s a paid version that came out in March for WiiWare, too.

 

Edmund McMillen (edmundm.com)

Super Meat Boy

Edmund McMillen has made a ton of indie games and most of them are free Flash titles. You can play Aether, Meat Boy, Coil, Spewer, and more for free. He also made Gish, an indie physics game where you control a ball of tar. Currently, Edmund is working on Super Meat Boy for consoles. Edmund is a slightly cracked and definitely un-PC indie personality. His blog and games are all worth checking out.


Semi Secret Software (semisecretsoftware.com)

Heard of Canabalt? If you haven't go here right now and check it out for free. Canabalt was made in less than seven days and took the Internet (and the App store) by storm with its addictive one-button controls. What most people don't know is that Adam Saltsman (aka, Adam Atomic) and the rest of the Semi Secret crew have other great products (and free prototypes) out there and are very active in the indie community.


Fantastic Contraption (fantasticcontraption.com)

This title is a lesson for every indie out there on how to make money. Fantastic Contraption is a simple physics game (similar to The Incredible Machine) with mediocre graphics, but it made made Colin Northway a lot of dough. What really made it a success was its in-game upsell feature and easy sharing features. This led to Contraption going viral.


Experimental Gameplay (experimentalgameplay.com)

Free games galore! This site has been the birthplace of tons of fantastic indie games from World of Goo to Canabalt to Shoot 1UP. The site focuses on free experimental prototypes made in less than seven days. Each month features tons of new games based on that month's theme. The next big indie game could be a prototype featured on EGP....

(continued on the next page)

 
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Comments (5)
Daryl
September 09, 2010

After following the recommendations I see on the IndieGamesBlog, I've played a lot of the games you mentioned and I can approve that most of them were really fun to me. Some other's that I have sitting in my indie games folder are:

I Wanna be the Guy - Incredibly hard platformer that takes many memorable sprites from classic video games

GENETOS - Awesome shum'up that takes players on a history lesson of all memorable shoot 'em ups.

Merry Gear Solid - Metal Gear parody with a festive twists. The constant puns are charming and gameplay is legitamately good.

A lot of JP indie games like Battle Moon Wars, Melty Blood, Touhou series and soon Recettear.

230340423
September 09, 2010

Thank you for giving Nifflas some recognition! Knytt and Within A Deep Forest are two of my very fondest gaming experiences of recent years. Great music too.

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September 10, 2010

Daryl-

Thanks for other great indie game recommendations.  I knew that I would miss some, but it's great that these articles always seem to get people to chip in other great recommendations.

Tltwit
September 10, 2010

It wasn't until I took part in an interview of an indie developer at Toronto's Fan Expo that I fully realized the depth of work and ideas that go into games like this. It's an exciting field I've definitely been diving more into.

Greg_ford
September 10, 2010

Another great article, Mike! I've played a handful of these games, but there are plenty more that I haven't. Seeing some of the games and sites you link to reminds me of just how expansive the indie game scene is. You could get lost for hours or days on some of these sites.

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