
Goodnight Universe
When a five-hour narrative asks you to close your eyes and feel something, the question is whether it earns it. Nice Dream's follow-up to Before Your Eyes earns it.
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I sat down with Goodnight Universe half-expecting to admire it from a respectful distance, the way you admire a well-framed photograph but don't really feel pulled inside. That is not what happened. Nice Dream, the studio behind Before Your Eyes, has built something that sits closer to a sustained mood than a conventional game, and I mean that as a sincere compliment, not a caveat. You play as Isaac, a six-month-old baby with the interior life of a philosophy graduate and a growing arsenal of psychic abilities. The setup sounds absurd on paper, and the game leans into that absurdity with a light touch. Isaac narrates his own memories from adulthood, voiced with dry warmth by Lewis Pullman, and the gap between his rich inner monologue and his complete physical helplessness is the engine that keeps the whole thing moving. What begins as quiet domestic observation, smashing a highchair tray, staring at the children's TV mascot Gilbert the Goat with reluctant fascination, opens into a sci-fi thriller when a predatory tech corporation takes notice of Isaac's powers. The tonal range is impressive: it earns its laughs and its grief in roughly equal measure, and the family at the center of it all, including Isaac's sister Cleo and a grandfather quietly fading to dementia, feels written by people who have actually sat with those feelings rather than researched them. Mechanically, this is first-person interactive fiction with a genuinely unusual input layer. On PC you can connect a webcam and let the game read your blinks, head turns, and facial expressions. Blinking at a light switches it on or off. Closing your eyes and sliding the mouse left or right fires off psychic telekinesis, shoving objects across the room or clearing obstacles. Smiling or frowning shapes the emotional coloring of dialogue choices. It sounds gimmicky. It is not. The moments where the game strips away all visual information and leaves you simply listening, with your eyes shut, to what Isaac is sensing around him, those moments are genuinely unlike anything else I have played this year. If you do not have a webcam or prefer not to use one, controller and mouse inputs cover every mechanic, and the game handles the swap graciously, but the face-tracking mode is the intended experience and the one I would steer you toward. The minority critical view is that some of the more active, on-rails sequences where timing and camera detection both matter feel like the weakest stretch, and that criticism is fair. The stealth crib sequence inside the tech facility is the one section where the seams show. The game offers a skip option if you fail repeatedly, which I appreciate as a design choice, even if it signals that the sequence was not fully solved before launch. At roughly five hours, Goodnight Universe knows its length. It does not pad. The soundscape in particular deserves its own mention: the psychic ability audio design is thoughtful, using subtle synth tones and tuning effects that make Isaac's powers feel like they originate somewhere behind your own ears. The art direction is warm and softly colored, somewhere between picture book and stylized 3D, which keeps the stranger sci-fi moments from feeling tonally jarring. The writing is the headline, though. The story is technically linear, and your dialogue choices texture the mood more than they branch the plot, but the writing is sharp enough that the lack of branching felt like the right call rather than a limitation. Not every player will exit this wrecked; some will find it moving but slight. Anyone who plays narrative games for the craft of character writing will find plenty to hold onto.

Indie & narrative
Etiquetas
Requisitos del sistema
Mínimos
- OS
- Windows 7 64-bit and above
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 5 GB available space
- Graphics
- Intel HD Graphics 520 or AMD Radeon Vega Integrated Graphics
- Processor
- AMD Athlon X4 880K 4Ghz or Intel Pentium G4500 3.5Ghz
Recomendados
- OS
- Windows 10 64-bit
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 5 GB available space
- Graphics
- AMD RX 480, NVIDIA GTX 970, 4 GB of Video Memory and above
- Processor
- AMD Ryzen 1500X 3.5Ghz or equivalent
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Información del juego
- Desarrolladora
- Nice Dream
- Distribuidora
- Skybound Games
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- 11 nov 2025
