Her Story (video game)

Her Story
Designer(s) Sam Barlow
Composer(s) Chris Zabriskie
Engine Unity
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows, OS X, iOS
Release date(s) 24 June 2015
Genre(s) Interactive movie
Mode(s) Single-player

Her Story is an interactive movie video game written and directed by Sam Barlow. It was released on 24 June 2015 for Microsoft Windows, OS X and iOS. Players search and sort through a database of video clips from fictional police interviews, and use the clips to solve the case of a missing man. The police interviews focus on the man's wife, Hannah Smith, portrayed by British musician Viva Seifert.

The game is Barlow's first project since his departure from Climax Studios, after which he became independent. He wanted to develop a game that was dependent on the narrative, and avoided working on the game until he was settled on an idea that was possible to execute. Barlow eventually decided to create a police procedural game, and incorporate live action footage. He conducted research for the game by watching existing police interviews. Upon doing so, he discovered recurring themes in the suspects' answers, and decided to incorporate ambiguity to the investigation in the game.

At release, Her Story was acclaimed by many reviewers, with praise particularly directed at the narrative, character performance, and unconventional gameplay mechanics. The game has sold over 100,000 copies, and was nominated for multiple year-end accolades, including Game of the Year awards from several gaming publications.

Gameplay

Her Story is an interactive movie game, focusing on a series of seven fictional police interviews from 1994.[1] As the game begins, players are presented with an old desktop, which contains several files and programs.[2] Among the programs are instructional text files, which explain the game's mechanics.[3] One of the programs automatically open on the desktop is the "L.O.G.I.C. Database", which allows players to search and sort video clips within the database,[4] of which there are 271.[5] The video clips are police interviews with a British woman: Hannah Smith. The interviews are unable to be watched in their entirety, forcing players to view short clips.[6] In the interviews, Hannah answers unknown questions to an off-screen detective, prompting players to decipher the context of the answers.[7] Hannah's answers are transcribed, and players find clips by searching in the database for words from the transcriptions, attempting to solve the case by piecing together information. As players select clips, they can enter user tags, which are then available as searchable terms. One of the files on the desktop is a database checker, which allows players to review the amount of clips that have been viewed; as a clip is viewed, the red box in the database checker changes to green.[5] The desktop also features the minigame Mirror Game, based on the strategy board game Reversi.[8]

An old computer desktop, filled with many open files and documents, including a "L.O.G.I.C. Database", which stores various video clips. One of the video clip previews is also open, with the user tag "Upset".
Old computer footage of a 37-year-old woman in a white shirt with long brown hair, sitting at a police interview desk. She is holding her hands together in front of her, and is looking to the right of the camera. There is a subtitle that reads "Please." At the top of th screen is a scroll bar, positioned at one-third.
An old computer desktop with many open files and documents. There is an open video clip preview, with the user tag "Nervous?"
In Her Story, players sort through video clips from a set of fictional police interviews to solve the case of a missing man.

Plot

The interview tapes feature a woman who introduces herself as Hannah Smith (Viva Seifert), whose husband Simon has gone missing, and is later found murdered. Hannah admits that the two had a difficult relationship, but has an alibi placing her in Glasgow at the time after an argument. As more pieces of the interviews are discovered, it is revealed that "Hannah" is actually two women: Hannah and Eve, identical twins separated at birth by the midwife. The twins were unaware of each other's existence until years later, at which point they decided to act as a single person, keeping a common diary and a set of rules defining their actions as "Hannah".[9]

Hannah eventually began dating Simon, who she met at a glazier where they both work. Despite their rules, Hannah sleeps with Simon and becomes pregnant, which upsets Eve, who makes an effort to get pregnant but is unable to do so; Hannah miscarries in the eighth month. Years later, Simon meets Eve in a bar. The two begin an affair, and Eve becomes pregnant; by this time, Hannah is infertile. On their birthday, Simon gives a handmade mirror to Hannah, but they have an argument, and Hannah reveals that she has a sister who is pregnant; Simon realises he is the father. The following day, Eve has an argument and flees to Glasgow. Hannah, wearing Eve's wig, confronts Simon. Unaware that she is Hannah, Simon gifts her another mirror. Hannah becomes furious, shattering the mirror and accidentally lodging it in Simon's throat, killing him. When Eve returns, the two agree to hide Simon's body, and use Eve's trip to Glasgow as an alibi.[9] At the end of the interview, Eve notes that Hannah is "gone",[10] and asks to speak to a lawyer.[11]

As players uncover enough of the story, a chat window appears asking if they are finished. Once players answer affirmatively, it is revealed that they are Sarah, Eve's daughter. The chat asks Sarah if she understands her mother's actions, and asks to meet her outside.[12]

Development

Headshot of a man with short brown hair, smiling at the camera.
Sam Barlow left Climax Studios and became an independent developer to work on Her Story.[13]

Her Story was developed by Sam Barlow, who previously worked on games such as Silent Hill: Origins (2007) and Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (2009) at Climax Studios. Barlow had conceived the idea of a police procedural game while working at Climax Studios, but decided to become independent to create the game,[13] in order to develop a game that is "deep on story".[14] He became frustrated by publishers using kitchen sink realism as the reason behind rejecting game pitches, and found that becoming independent allowed him to create his own game of the sort.[15] He also wished to become independent after playing games like Year Walk (2013) and 80 Days (2014).[16] Barlow avoided development until he had an idea that was possible to execute. "I could probably quite easily have gone and made an exploration horror game ... but I kind of knew that there would be big compromises there because of budget," he said.[13] Barlow spent his savings to work on the game, allowing him a year of development time.[4] He followed through with the concept of Her Story, as it focused on an "intimate setting, dialogue and character interaction", which he found was often dismissed in larger titles.[13] Barlow felt particularly inspired to develop Her Story after seeing the continuous support of his 1999 game Aisle.[16] When referring to how Her Story challenges typical game conventions, Barlow compares it to the Dogme 95 filmmaking movement, and Alfred Hitchcock's 1948 film Rope.[17]

Her Story was approved through Steam Greenlight, and was crowdfunded by Indie Fund. It was released on 24 June 2015 for Microsoft Windows, OS X and iOS.[18] Barlow wanted to launch the game on all platforms simultaneously, as he was unsure where the audience would be.[19] "If I'd just gone for just one I'd have lost a lot of the potential audience," he commented.[20] Barlow found that playing Her Story on mobile devices is a "'sofa' experience".[21] He also noted that it felt "natural" for it to be released on mobile devices, as they are regularly used to watch videos and search the internet; similar tasks are used as gameplay mechanics in Her Story.[21] The iPhone's smaller pixel size of 640×480 as opposed to 800×600 led to Barlow's doubts of a release on the platform, but he was influenced to release it upon receiving positive feedback through testing.[20] As development neared completion, the game underwent testing, which allowed Barlow to "balance some aspects" and "polish items together".[22] Her Story runs on the Unity game engine.[23]

Gameplay design

Old computer footage of a 37-year-old woman with long brown hair in a red jacket, sitting at a police interview desk. She is holding her hands together in front of her, and is looking to the right of the camera.
Barlow decided to implement live action footage into the game after becoming frustrated with the technical challenge of translating an actor's performance into a game engine.[24]

Barlow's immediate idea was to create a game involving police interviews, but he "didn't know exactly what that meant".[19] He then conceived the idea to involve real video footage, and the ability to access the footage through a database interface; he described the interface as being "part Apple II, part Windows 3.1 and part Windows 98".[19] The interface design was inspired by Barlow's appreciation of the police procedural genre, commenting that "the conceit of making the computer itself a prop in the game was so neat".[2] He also compared the searching mechanic to the Google search engine, and wanted to "run with the idea" that players are "essentially Googling".[2] The game's concept was inspired by the TV series Homicide: Life on the Street (1993–1999), which Barlow found depicted police interviews being a "gladiatorial arena for detectives".[13] Barlow intentionally made the game's opening screen to be "slightly too long", to immediately notify players of the slow pacing that would follow.[25]

Inspiration to work on Her Story stemmed from Barlow's disappointment of other detectives games: he felt that L.A. Noire (2011) never allowed him to feel like "the awesome detective who was having to read things and follow up threads of investigation", and he called the Ace Attorney series (2001–present) "rigidity".[26] When Barlow began development on Her Story, he added more typical game aspects, but the game mechanics became more minimalist as development progressed.[27] The initial plan for the game was for players to work towards a definitive resolution, ultimately solving the crime. However, when Barlow tested the concept on pre-existing interview transcripts of convicted murderer Christopher Porco, he began to discover themes surfacing within the interviews,[7] particularly relating to the concept of money, which was ultimately a large factor in Porco's trial.[28] He took this concept of recurring themes and threads, and decided to "move beyond the clearly scripted stuff" when developing Her Story.[7] Barlow felt that the story's appeal was the ambiguity of the investigation, comparing Her Story to the podcast Serial (2014–present), which he listened to late in development. He found that the attraction of Serial was the lack of a definitive solution, noting that "people lean towards certain interpretations ... what makes it interesting is the extent to which it lives on in your imagination".[7]

Story and characters

A 32-year-old woman with long brown hair, and a yellow and brown outfit. She is playing drums, and is surrounded by music equipment.
Musician Viva Seifert was chosen to portray the lead character in Her Story. Seifert had previously worked with Barlow on the cancelled Legacy of Kain: Dead Sun.[24]

Barlow decided to feature live action footage in the game after becoming frustrated with his previous projects, particularly with the technical challenge of translating an actor's performance into a game engine.[24] Barlow set out to work with an actor on Her Story, having enjoyed the process while working at Climax Studio, albeit with a larger budget.[13] He contacted Viva Seifert, whom he had intermittently worked with on Legacy of Kain: Dead Sun for a year, before its cancellation.[24] He felt that Seifert is "very good at picking up a line and intuitively pulling a lot of the subtext into her performance", which led him to believe that she was "perfect" for the role in Her Story.[29] When Barlow asked Seifert to audition, he sent her a 300-page script, which he managed to reduce to 80 pages, by altering font size, as well as some dialogue; she accepted the role.[24] Seifert began to feel pressure midway through filming, when she realised that "the whole game is hinging" on her performance.[24] She described the shoot as "intense" and "rather exhausting", and felt as if she was "subtly being scrutinised" by Barlow, which helped her performance.[30] Barlow also felt that the intensity helped Seifert's performance, taking cues from director Alfred Hitchcock, who would upset his actors in order to achieve the greatest performance.[28] Seifert felt that there were small nuances in her performance that may have "added some twists and turns" for players that Barlow had not anticipated.[30] The game's seven police interviews were filmed roughly in chronological order[7] over five days,[30] in a process that Barlow called "natural".[20] Barlow travelled to Seifert's home county of Cornwall to film.[30] He felt that finding the locations for the interrogation rooms was the simplest part of production, because "everywhere has crappy looking rooms", with footage being recorded in a council building in Truro.[7][4] When filming was complete, Barlow input the footage through two VHS players, before implementing it into the game, in order to accurately represent the time period of 1994.[19]

Barlow played the part of the detectives during filming, asking scripted questions to Seifert's character,[31] but is never featured in Her Story.[7] When watching police interviews for research, Barlow found himself empathising with the interviewee, which inspired him to exclude the detective from the game. He stated that the interviews typically feature "double betrayal", in which the detectives are "pretending to be the best friend".[32] Barlow felt that removing the detective from the game empowers Seifert's character, allowing players to empathise.[32] When conducting research for Her Story, Barlow looked at the case regarding the murder of Travis Alexander, which made him consider the manner that female murder suspects are treated in interrogations, stating that they "tend to be fetishised, more readily turned into archetypes".[19] This was further proved to Barlow when studying the interviews of Casey Anthony and Amanda Knox; he found that media commentary often ignored the evidence of the investigation, instead focusing on the expressions of the suspects during the interviews.[33] Barlow conducted further research by studying texts about psychology, and the use of language.[16]

A laptop with the game footage sits atop two VHS players. Wires connect them to another laptop nearby, with a VHS cartridge to the right.
After the filming was complete, Barlow input the footage into two VHS players prior to its implementation into the game. This was done for the footage to accurately represent the time period of 1994.[19]

After conceiving the game's main mechanics, Barlow began developing the story, conducting research and "letting [the story] take on a life of its own".[19] To develop the story, Barlow placed the script into a spreadsheet, which became so large it often crashed his laptop upon opening it.[4] He mapped out every character involved in the investigation, including their backstories and agendas.[28] He spent about half of development creating detailed documents charting the story's characters and events.[16] He also determined the dates on which the police interviews would take place, and what the suspect was doing in the interim.[28] Once he had determined the game's concept more precisely, Barlow ensured the script contained "layers of intrigue", in order to interest players to finish the game.[13] Barlow often replaced words of the script with synonyms, to ensure that some clips were not associated with irrelevant words.[13] When writing the script, Barlow generally avoided supernatural themes, but realised that it would involve a "slight dreamlike surreal edge".[34] Working on the script, he often found that he was "very much in the moment, writing from inside the characters' heads".[15] He found it difficult to create a new idea for the story, as detective fiction has been explored many times before.[29]

"The 49th Street Galleria"
Chris Zabriskie's "The 49th Street Galleria" was used as the game's opening theme.

"That Kid in Fourth Grade Who Really Liked the Denver Broncos"
The track is a slow piano piece.
"That Kid in Fourth Grade Who Really Liked the Denver Broncos", composed by Zabriskie, was used in the game's closing credits.

Problems playing these files? See media help.

Music and sound production

When searching for music to use in Her Story, Barlow looked for songs that sounded "slightly out-of-time".[20] He ultimately used eight tracks from musician Chris Zabriskie,[35] and found that his music invoked nostalgia, and had a "modern edge".[20] He felt that the music "highlights the gap between the 'fake computer world'" and the game.[19] The "emotional intensity" of the clips also influences the music changes in Her Story.[15] Barlow also intended to feature a song for Seifert to sing in some of the clips that fit within the game. He settled on the murder ballad "The Twa Sisters", which he felt would trigger the mythical elements of the game.[20] Seifert and Barlow both altered the ballad, to fit the game.[30] Barlow intended for the sound design to be "all about authenticity".[19] He used an old keyboard to provide sound efforts for the computer, using stereo panning for the keys to have the correct 3D position in playback.[19]

Sequel

In January 2016, Barlow confirmed that a sequel was in development, under the working title Her Story 2. Barlow considered it a "spiritual successor" to Her Story, with a narrative unrelated to the first game, thought it will continue to use full-motion video as its central gameplay element.[36][37]

Reception

Critical reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
Metacritic(iOS) 91/100[38]
(PC) 86/100[39]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Adventure Gamers[3]
Destructoid10/10[40]
Game Informer8.5/10[41]
GameSpot8/10[42]
Giant Bomb[43]
IGN8.5/10[44]
PC Gamer (US)90/100[45]
Polygon8.5/10[46]
VideoGamer.com8/10[47]
Digital Spy[5]

Her Story was well received by critics. Review aggregator Metacritic calculated an average score of 91 out of 100 based on 10 reviews for the iOS version, indicating "universal acclaim",[38] and 86 out of 100 based on 49 reviews for the Windows version, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[39] Metacritic ranks the game within the top 20 iOS and Windows games released in 2015,[48][49] and GameRankings ranks Her Story within its top 100 iOS games of all time.[50] Praise was particularly directed at the game's narrative,[41][46][51] Seifert's performance,[3][42][45] and gameplay mechanics.[40][41][47] IGN's Brian Albert called Her Story "the most unique game I've played in years",[44] and Steven Burns of VideoGamer.com named it "one of the year's best and most interesting games".[47] Adam Smith of Rock, Paper, Shotgun remarked that it "might be the best FMV game ever made";[52] Michael Thomsen of The Washington Post declared it "a beautiful amalgam of the cinema and video game formats".[53]

Critics lauded the game's narrative. Kimberley Wallace of Game Informer wrote that the "fragmented" delivery of the story "works to its benefit".[41] She appreciated the subtlety of the narrative, and the ambiguity surrounding the ending.[41] Polygon's Megan Farokhmanesh noted that Her Story "nails the dark, voyeuristic nature of true crime".[46] Chris Schilling of The Daily Telegraph was impressed by the coherence of the narrative, "even when presented out of order".[51] Eurogamer's Simon Parkin found the effects of the narrative to be similar to well-received HBO thrillers, particularly in terms of audience attention.[54] Stephanie Bendixsen of Good Game was disappointed that large plot points were revealed early in the game, but attributed this to the uniqueness of each players' experience.[55]

Seifert's performance in the game received high praise from reviewers. GameSpot's Justin Clark felt that the performance "anchored" the game.[42] Katie Smith of Adventure Gamers wrote that Seifert is convincing in the role, particularly with small details such as body language, but was startled by the lack of emotion.[3] Game Informer's Wallace echoed similar remarks, noting that Seifert "nailed the role".[41] Rock, Paper, Shotgun's Smith wrote that "the whole thing might collapse" without Seifert's "convincing" performance.[52] IGN's Albert named the acting "believable", stating that Seifert's performance is "appropriately both grounded and absurd".[44] Joe Donnelly of Digital Spy wrote that Seifert's performance has the potential to inspire similar games,[5] and Andy Kelly of PC Gamer called the performance "understated, realistic, and complex".[45] Burns of VideoGamer.com felt generally impressed by Seifert's performance, but noted some "occasional bad acting".[47]

The unconventional gameplay mechanics also received positive remarks from critics. Destructoid's Laura Kate Dale felt that the game's pacing and structure assisted the narrative,[40] and Wallace of Game Informer found that making a connection between key points in the narrative was entertaining.[41] Burns of VideoGamer.com praised the game's ability to make players realise their own biases, and challenge their "sense of self".[47] Albert of IGN felt that the searching tool was "gratifying", and positively contributes to the pacing of the game,[44] while The Washington Post's Thomsen wrote that the database mechanic created "contemplative gaps between scenes", allowing for "poignance and power" within the narrative.[53] Bendixsen of Good Game described the desktop as "appropriately retro", noting that she was "drawn in immediately".[55]

The game sold over 100,000 copies by 10 August 2015;[56] about 60,000 copies were sold on Windows, with the remaining 40,000 sold on iOS.[19]

Accolades

Her Story has received multiple nominations and awards from gaming publications. It won Game of the Year from Polygon,[57] as well as Game of the Month from Rock, Paper, Shotgun[58] and GameSpot.[59] It received the Breakthrough Award at the 33rd Golden Joystick Awards,[60] and the award for Most Original game from PC Gamer.[61] At The Game Awards 2015, Her Story won Best Narrative, and Seifert won Best Performance for her role in the game.[62] The Guardian named Her Story the best iOS game of 2015.[63] The game also has numerous pending nominations at the Emotional Games Awards,[64] DICE Awards,[65] Game Developers Choice Awards,[66] and Independent Games Festival Awards.[67]

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