

It just felt laughably stereotypical and it became hard for me to watch after a while. This felt like some stereotype of what bro tech types want in interactive fiction, or in life. Second, the premise of the story is some snarky dude in romantic/sexual relations with three attractive women at once, and it just feels like a joke out of a Silicon Valley episode. They should have either had the calls two-sided, or at least had a way to pair the two sides of a conversation. It also means sitting through long spells of just watching someone's expression. First, the mechanics of having (mostly) one side of a video call and then needing to try and guess to find the matching other side. But sadly, I put it down after an hour or so, for two reasons. This allows for a very user-driven story exposition, which is super cool. I really liked the initial premise that you are an investigator who has found a database of video clips to search through to develop the storyline.

Starring Logan Marshall-Green, Alexandra Shipp, Kerry Bish, Angela Sarafyan and directed by Sam Barlow, creator of Her Story and Silent Hill: Shattered Memories.

I really liked the initial premise that you are an investigator who has I am a fan of interactive fiction, so I was curious to try this out. A Video Game About Private Conversations An investigative thriller game with non-linear storytelling, Telling Lies revolves around a cache of secretly recorded video conversations. I am a fan of interactive fiction, so I was curious to try this out.
