Dorfromantik

Last updated
Dorfromantik
Dorfromantik cover art.jpg
Developer(s) Toukana Interactive
Publisher(s) Toukana Interactive
Engine Unity [1]
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows
Nintendo Switch
ReleaseMicrosoft Windows
April 28, 2022
Nintendo Switch
September 29, 2022
Genre(s) Puzzle, strategy
Mode(s) Single-player

Dorfromantik is a strategy-puzzle [2] video game developed and published by Toukana Interactive. In the game, players place hexagonal tiles of various biomes to create an idyllic landscape. The game was released in March 2021 for Windows via early access and had its full release on April 28, 2022. A version for Nintendo Switch was released on September 29, 2022.

Contents

Gameplay

The game involves placing hexagonal tiles that contain a combination of one or more of the following land uses: forest, barren, village, water, railroad, and field, with one land use along each side. The game begins with a barren tile and 40 new but random tiles to be placed. [3] New tiles can be rotated before being placed and must touch at least one side to an existing tile; once placed, the tile cannot be moved. Both water and railroad tiles have to connect to already placed water or railroad if the tile is placed next to an existing water or railroad tile, limiting the possible orientation and adding further complexity to the game. [4] Points are awarded for connecting the same land uses, special quests that involve creating an area of the same land use of a certain size, for example 10 field, and closing off an area to that land use, for example closing a forest so no new forest can be attached. Additional tiles are awarded for completing quests, closing areas, and for matching every side of a tile to the same land use on the surrounding tiles. [5] The game ends when the player runs out of tiles. [6]

A creative mode was added into the game in August 2021, allowing players to construct cities and villages with an infinite number of tiles. [7]

Development

Dorfromantik was developed by four German students studying at HTW Berlin (Luca Langenberg, Sandro Heuberger, and Zwi Zausch, and Timo Falcke). The four founded an independent studio named Toukana Interactive to work on the game. The four students began developing prototypes for their game during a game jam at Ludum Dare in April 2020, with the idea of Dorfromantik, which translates into "village romanticization", being one of them. The tiles featured in the game were inspired by board games, while the game's art style was influenced by both landscape paintings and photography. [8]

The game was released via early access on March 25, 2021. [9] While the 1.0 version of the game was initially set to be released in mid or late 2021, the release date was later pushed to early 2022 as the team needed more time to release new content prior to the game's official launch. [10] The game was released in full on April 28, 2022. [11] The Nintendo Switch version was released on September 29, 2022. [12]

Reception

Dorfromantik received generally positive reviews when it was released via early access. [22] For the full release, the game received "generally favorable" reviews according to review aggregator Metacritic. [13] [14]

Eurogamer praised the game for being simple enough to play casually, with mastering tile placement making it compelling in the long run. [23] The Guardian liked the atmosphere of Dorfromantik, writing, "the ambience is soothing, your actions gently shooed along by a spare but cheery piano and synth soundtrack." [24] Polygon described how the game discouraged optimization, instead focusing on offering new challenges for the player to contend with, saying, "This is a very clean and logical system that has been designed to produce unexpected, organic outcomes. That's an incredible achievement". [25] While enjoying the progression system, Destructoid criticized the lack of variety in the tile sets: "There are "biomes" that you can find by branching out far enough, but these merely change the colors of the trees, ground, and houses. I think it would be neat if enough village tiles would give way to more modern skyblockers". [26] Rock Paper Shotgun described the creative mode as, "particularly generous, as it lets you save those picturesque creations you've spent so long building up in both your mind and onscreen, and seeing them through to their imagined conclusion". [27]

Accolades

YearAwardCategoryResultRefs
202123rd Independent Games Festival Awards Best Student GameNominated [28]
German Computer Games Award Best Family GameNominated [29]
Best Game DesignWon
Young Talent Award Best DebutWon
2022 Steam Awards Sit Back and RelaxNominated [30]
Golden Joystick Awards Best Indie GameNominated [31]

Board game adaptation

In 2023, a board game adaption of Dorfromantik was published by Pegasus Spiele. [32] The same year, it won the prestigious Spiel des Jahres award. [33]

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