Is it something similar to To The Moon , for instance? Cause that's probably the best thing I've experienced on PC so far.There is no "gameplay loop" because it's more of an interactive art installation than a traditional "game". It has all the features of an adventure game - you control a character and move around, you can interact with other characters and objects in the world, there are different maps you navigate across, sometimes there are dialogue choices in conversations. But none of that has a real impact in a gamification sense. It's more about the experience of seeing feelings and emotions portrayed in a magical and mystical way. Seeing the themes of the undercurrent of a part of America. The forgotten. The lost. Ghosts of the past. Hope for the future. Fleeting emotions in the wind. Things which could have been. Dreams that were never realised. That sort of thing. It's like going on a backpacking trip with a collection of short stories and reading a little as you travel. It's like taking a sabbatical from the world to explore something else. It's like drowning in your memories and finding that they are shared with others in some way. It's like going to an art museum and finding Alice's rabbit hole that leads into Wonderland.
Yes. Kentucky Route Zero is amazing and it is one of the true pieces of art in the gaming landscape.