![]() But this iteration of the game is nested within others: There’s the retail copy of Inscryption that we as players buy on Steam and play through by building decks and winning matches, which is an avenue from which we see someone else play a digital copy of Inscryption, which he discovered from an analog card game named Inscryption. What players see, at first, is a deck-builder where the player uses an array of beasts and cryptids to beat a mysterious jailer at his own game. Inscryption is intentionally multifaceted and dense with interpretations, thanks to its many gameplay layers it’s a game about a game that’s really about games. Image: Daniel Mullins Games/Devolver Digital But that hasn’t stopped fans from creating videos and Google Docs that dig into the game’s secrets and link them back to Mullins’ previous titles - making solving the mystery a kind of game unto itself. In fact, the game might be better without all of that extra stuff. Is all of this additional information necessary to enjoy Inscryption? Definitely not. There’s a larger mystery at play, and it’s an alluring one.įans have already tracked down all the clues, solved all the puzzles, and even found an extension to the game’s ending. ![]() That’s the trick to Inscryption, and it’s present within all of developer Daniel Mullins’ games. ![]() But if you pay attention, there are little clues and hints that seem to have no real conclusion. Inscryption has lots of secrets lurking beneath the surface, and players learn pretty early on that something is amiss with the card game they are playing and the opponent who is testing them. ![]()
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