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Looking for a game where reading an immersive in-game manual is one of the main gameplay aspects

Here's a couple of examples Keep talking and nobody explodes — The most popular in the list I think

Uncle Chop's rocket shop — the game where you are repairing your client's rockets by following the in-game guidebook

Tin can — here you are also repairing the spaceshp but this time you are it's capitan and you are in space in the middle of nowhere

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55 replies

Tunic!!!!!!

(edit: I typed four exclamation points, why is it only showing three??)

(edit 2: now it's 6, because I couldn't tell that the critters above me were doing 4 and 5, they only showed as 3 too)

-- Frost

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  • Tunic — You need to figure out the game's manual to know how to play. Souls-style exploration and combat.
  • Papers, Please — If you liked Rocket Shop, you'll like this. You are a border guard, checking people's documents and choosing if they can enter. The rules change every day as international tensions grow. Great plot with multiple endings, expressed with just your green and red stamps.
  • Hypnospace Outlaw (kind of) — You are a moderator in a fictional version of GeoCities in the last months of 1999. Your training is web pages and crusty point and click CD-ROM slideshows. It's heartfelt story about the impact of technology on society and a loving funeral for that era of the world wide web.

As even further stretches, there is TIS-100 and Shenzhen I/O, both Zachtronics games that have you do programming. The tutorial for TIS-100 just opens a PDF that looks like a crusty scan of an ancient computer manual, like you were learning to program on a C64 or something.

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Thanks for reminding me of Hypnospace Outlaw. I finished it once and thinking of replaying it again when I somewhat forget about the story/plot. Time to reinstall :D

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Tis-100 is like learning new programming language and do some quiz with it. If you want similar experience, learn assembly languages, and do some exercise :)))

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I loved Hypnospace Outlaw. Its so nostalgic and yet the surreal aspect of it gives it its own flavor that is separate from the nostalgia.

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Strange Horticulture -You run an occult plant shop and identify plants by leafing through a botanical guidebook, matching illustrations and descriptions.

HighFleet - Intercepting enemy radio transmissions means using the in-game codebook and manual tables to decode messages and triangulate positions.

The Signal State - A Zachlike about repairing farm equipment with modular synth racks and lots of documentation.

Retro Gadgets - You build electronic gadgets from scratch, and reading the chip documentation is basically the whole game.

Sethian - You learn a dead alien language by studying an in-game dictionary/manual to converse with a computer.

Carrier Command 2 - Co-op crewing a carrier where the in-game manual is dense and necessary, giving strong Tin Can/submarine-crew vibes.

Objects in Space - Space sim, flying a submarine-like ship, reading dials and signals.

Jalopy - Roadtrip / car maintenance game set in Eastern Bloc.

Reentry - Crazy realistic space sim where you follow manuals, procedures, checklists etc to complete missions like the Apollo moon landing.

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EXAPUNKS!

It's the dialup 70s, your body is turning into computer parts, and medicine costs 300 dollars a day.

Read the zines, learn to hack. Hack a restaurant. Hack a bank. Hack your body. Hack the planet!

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Also other games from zachtronics: TIS-100 and Shenzhen IO

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Highly recommend. It's a great puzzle game. No coding knowledge is needed, but familiarity with assembly is helpful

Edit: Whoops, I was thinking of Shenzen I/O. Same developer though

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Elite dangerous, you end up with spreadsheets fetching data from online sources if you go wild

DayZ everyone uses interactive map and it's a good game for anyone with time to kill and some gluttony for punishment. I do need to add: "Players often describe DayZ as a psychological horror or "psychosis simulator" due to the extreme paranoia and auditory hallucinations of solo survival. In the r/DayZ subreddit, survivors frequently share stories of constantly misinterpreting wind and ambient environmental noises for distant player footsteps or enemy gunfire"

Project zomboid is really cool if you print out the world map

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The DS version of Ni no Kuni included a physical spellbook you're meant to consult. JP-only, but the fantranslation made it into a PDF.

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Iron Nest? You drive a turret and you have to read instruction on how to operate it and where to shoot. Not yet come out though.

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Keep talking and nobody explodes.

One player(s) has the bomb disposal manual and the other has the game controls to defuse the bomb.

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lemmy.world

I already know about this game, and I even mentioned it in the post

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Not quite as strictly as what you've cited, but some of the older Sierra point-and-clicks relied on maps/pamphlets/etc that were packed in with the game. Most just used them as low-budget and thematically in-universe anti-piracy gating (the Dagger of Amon Ra), but some stretched beyond that. Conquests of the Longbow: the Legend of Robin Hood had royal family crests, language keys, and (of I remember correctly) a catalog of gems that were all perused outside of the game interface.

GOG has PDFs of all those documents if you buy the games there, so you can still experience it fully. Might be worth checking out, since it's usually less than $5.

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I have a game wishlisted which I think needs constant consultation with diverse information to be played. It's called Comet64, and you kind of have to program a special kind of computer called Comet64.

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lemmy.world

Not really a manual, but more of a 4th wall derailment into a fever dream of sorts? With a lot of reading while navigating a mystery? And some match 3 tower defence action in between?

Titanium court.

For more of a game with an actual manual focus, try - King of the Bridge. It’s a game about chess. Mostly.

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Oh! I'm absolutely loving Titanium Court, I've been playing it on and off for a couple of weeks, now. I've only recently gotten to Chapter 2!

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feddit.online

Subnautica and Subnautica 2.

The guide is an ingame tablet that's literally your character's survival guide book, recording data on wildlife and tracking your crafting tree.

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WappleFF27reply
feddit.online

Strongly disagree, the pdf holds all of the beacon markers that literally guide you through the game.

Also, it lists all unlocked recipes and their ingredients, which help guide player progression.

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piefed.social

You do not need the manual. At all.

Just because they went through the effort to put a bunch of info into a place does not mean you NEED that info to do anything. Similarly, just because it can be useful does not make it required.

Now, stop being pedantic and start trying to think of games where you NEED the manual, hence making it, a "main gameplay aspect".

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I love Zachtronics games that have been recommended a few times already. But for a different genre...

Ni no kuni is a RPG that was kind of that, with a big (originally physical) book of magic. But since it's been remade on many platforms as a digital download, the book is there in a rather boring (but useable) pdf reader-like UI and has been made a bit less useful.

It's still rather charming having this in-universe codex-like book listing gameplay elements, items, recipes, bestiary, and bits of lore about the world (and some pages just telling random fables about whatever). Nowhere near required reading for the game though, just occasionally useful.

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Ostranauts?

Its a space salvage game with a good atmosphere

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who
feddit.org

If by "in-game manual" you mean one that's part of the game world (not necessarily displayed on a computer screen) check out the classic Infocom adventures. For example, Border Zone came with a printed terrain map and tourist guide, and Sherlock and The Witness came with newspapers, among other things.

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By in-game manual I meant a manual which built directly into the game and a main character could read it, not just a player who opened a PDF outside the game. And also usually those manuals are stylized, like in papers please (which I forgot to mention in the post btw) or like in Uncle Chop's rocket shop

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Give king of the bridge a check. Learning about the manual and working with it is the whole plan

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lemmy.ml

I believe in Deaths Door, we had to gather pages that explained the game mechanics, but by the time you got the pages it was moot point. Tho I might mixing up some games.

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I don't remember a manual in game for Death's Door. It's a good game, though.

Are you mixing it up with TUNIC?

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lemmy.world

For modern game, try elite dangerous. It doesn't come up with pdf (or I don't find it yet), but you have to do tutorials and watch a lot of YouTube to know how to fly your ship, especially without auto-pilot, auto-docking

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It's a bit off topic but I've had the most curious experience trying to play Elite Dangerous in VR when that came out. It is a complex game and you really need that "alt-tab" to read something in a browser or notepad or markdown viewer. But with a VR headset that wasn't possible! Or very cumbersome, having to move your headset and balancing it halfway to look at your real screen, which is obscured by a weird game window to look at a document lol.

It was a frustrating experience and I eventually developed something like bit like VR claustrophobia, feeling like you're actually trapped in a small tincan of a spaceship with no comfort and connectivity. I see the lack of a proper virtual reality desktop OS or VR accessible shell is a real problem for complex games.

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