We Love It's Guide to…
Impostor Factory
A bonkers time-loop tragicomedy murder mystery thriller featuring multiple casualties and a suspicious cat, from the creator of To the Moon & Finding Paradise.
Released:
Sep 30, 2021
•
Developer:
Freebird Games
•
Publisher:
Freebird Games
Story Rich
Emotional
Pixel Graphics
Adventure
RPG
2D
Singleplayer
Top-Down
Atmospheric
Psychological Horror
Mystery
Comedy
Narrative
Interactive Fiction
Lovecraftian
Linear
Cute
Funny
Retro
JRPG
The Developer Says...
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Impostor Factory is a narrative-driven adventure game that is categorically out of its mind.
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Dr. Watts and Dr. Rosalene have peculiar jobs: They give people another chance to live their lives, all the way from the very beginning.
But this isn't their story. Probably.
Instead, it's about Quincy. Let me tell you a story about him.
One day, Quincy was invited to a fancy parteh at a suspiciously secluded mansion. So, he accepted and went; because even though the mansion was suspicious and secluded, it was also fancy and had a parteh.
In fact, it turned out to be so fancy that there was a time machine in its bathroom. Quincy could wash his hands and time-travel while he was at it. Talk about a time-saver!
But of course, then people start dying, because that's what they do. And somewhere along the way, things get a little Lovecraftian and tentacles are involved.
Anyway, that's around 1/3 of what the game is really about.
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F.A.Q.:
Q: Is playing To the Moon and Finding Paradise mandatory before playing this game?
A: Impostor Factory can be played independently, just like the games before it. But the order of playing would affect the experience.
Q: Is Impostor Factory the sequel to To the Moon and Finding Paradise?
A: Maybe not. Maybe it's a sequel. Maybe it's a prequel. Maybe it's both.
Impostor Factory is a narrative-driven adventure game that is categorically out of its mind.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Watts and Dr. Rosalene have peculiar jobs: They give people another chance to live their lives, all the way from the very beginning.
But this isn't their story. Probably.
Instead, it's about Quincy. Let me tell you a story about him.
One day, Quincy was invited to a fancy parteh at a suspiciously secluded mansion. So, he accepted and went; because even though the mansion was suspicious and secluded, it was also fancy and had a parteh.
In fact, it turned out to be so fancy that there was a time machine in its bathroom. Quincy could wash his hands and time-travel while he was at it. Talk about a time-saver!
But of course, then people start dying, because that's what they do. And somewhere along the way, things get a little Lovecraftian and tentacles are involved.
Anyway, that's around 1/3 of what the game is really about.
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Key Features
- A story that will make you curse at the screen
- A cozy mix between adventure game elements and classic RPG aesthetics
- Dialogues that read so wrong but feel so right
- An espresso execution with zero filler and no time drains
- long cat
F.A.Q.:
Q: Is playing To the Moon and Finding Paradise mandatory before playing this game?
A: Impostor Factory can be played independently, just like the games before it. But the order of playing would affect the experience.
Q: Is Impostor Factory the sequel to To the Moon and Finding Paradise?
A: Maybe not. Maybe it's a sequel. Maybe it's a prequel. Maybe it's both.
Awards and Kudos
YouTube Search Results
Back of the Box Details
Steam Deck
Playable
DLC
2
DRM/EULA Notices
None
Achievements
None
Ratings
None
Demo
None
Metacritic
80 — View
Content Notices
None
Controller Support
Xbox
Reviews
96%
Overwhelmingly Positive
Based on 12725 reviews
Individual reviews are not available yet.
