Compara los precios de The End of the Sun en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por The End of the Sun Team. Publicado por The End of the Sun Forge. Lanzado el 29/1/2025. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Adventure, Indie.

Quietly one of the most culturally specific games released this year: a two-person Polish studio rebuilt Slavic myth from museum floors up, and it shows in every crackling bonfire and folk chant.

I came to this one with low expectations and left it sitting in my head for days. The End of the Sun is a first-person mystery adventure built entirely around fire, time, and the intimate lives of a Slavic village caught between seasons. You play as the Ashter, a mage-tracker chasing the Rarog - a mythical fiery bird - across a countryside that shifts between spring, summer, autumn, and winter, each period separated by years in the lives of the same cast of characters. The core mechanic is simple but quietly elegant: find unlit bonfires, kindle them, and watch fragmented memories of the villagers surface around you. Fully lit hearths become doorways for time travel, letting you witness characters like Mira and Nadarim as children, adults, and elders. Progress is non-linear, and the game trusts you to piece things together without a hand-holding quest marker - which is both its defining strength and its sharpest friction point. The world itself is the real craft achievement here. The development team used photogrammetry sourced from actual ethnographic museums, meaning the buildings, tools, clay pots, and carved wooden figures you examine are reconstructions of real cultural artifacts. Wood looks heavy. Stone looks cold. The seasonal transitions shift the same locations dramatically - a summer meadow becomes a snow-dusted hollow - and that impermanence carries the game's central theme without a single line of exposition needing to do the work. The ambient sound design layers birdsong, wind, rushing water, and wood creak into something genuinely immersive. The original score, composed specifically for the game, leans on flutes, fiddles, chants in the native language (subtitled), and percussion that only arrives when the story turns tense. Silence and music here feel deliberate, not accidental. Puzzles fall somewhere between light environmental investigation and object-fetch tasks. You examine artifacts, read handwritten notes in a playful font, follow subtle visual cues across the seasonal map, and unlock new cutscene chapters by completing bonfire sequences. Each completed scene can be watched from any angle, and the Ashter narrates naturally rather than reading off objectives like a checklist. Veterans of atmospheric adventures will find the puzzle difficulty comfortable to easy - the occasional fetch task repeated one time too many is a fair criticism. The lack of fast travel also draws player complaints, and legitimately so: the map shows bonfire locations and undiscovered areas, but your own position is not marked, so backtracking requires you to orient by rivers, waterfalls, and familiar structures. A rough first hour is nearly universal across reviews, with most players reporting things click into place only after the second bonfire. If you bail before that, you miss the actual game. The weak links are character models and facial animation, which look stiff against the otherwise gorgeous environment - a budget scar that becomes less distracting once you are invested in the story. There are also occasional performance slowdowns when switching between seasons quickly, and at least some reports of infrequent crashes in those transitions. None of these are dealbreakers for the audience this game is genuinely aimed at. Comparisons to What Remains of Edith Finch and The Forgotten City have circulated in coverage, and both feel apt for different reasons: the former for the way environmental memory-telling carries emotional weight, the latter for the time-loop structure that rewards thoroughness over speed. The creature encounters - drowners, nightwraiths, the Forefathers' Eve ritual, a psychedelic sequence involving Svarog himself - give the mythology real texture beyond decorative flavour. At six to eight hours, it knows exactly when to end. Kai, Scout Team

The End of the Sun

The End of the Sun

29 ene 2025The End of the Sun TeamThe End of the Sun Forge
GamerScout opina

Quietly one of the most culturally specific games released this year: a two-person Polish studio rebuilt Slavic myth from museum floors up, and it shows in every crackling bonfire and folk chant.

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Acerca de The End of the Sun

I came to this one with low expectations and left it sitting in my head for days. The End of the Sun is a first-person mystery adventure built entirely around fire, time, and the intimate lives of a Slavic village caught between seasons. You play as the Ashter, a mage-tracker chasing the Rarog - a mythical fiery bird - across a countryside that shifts between spring, summer, autumn, and winter, each period separated by years in the lives of the same cast of characters. The core mechanic is simple but quietly elegant: find unlit bonfires, kindle them, and watch fragmented memories of the villagers surface around you. Fully lit hearths become doorways for time travel, letting you witness characters like Mira and Nadarim as children, adults, and elders. Progress is non-linear, and the game trusts you to piece things together without a hand-holding quest marker - which is both its defining strength and its sharpest friction point. The world itself is the real craft achievement here. The development team used photogrammetry sourced from actual ethnographic museums, meaning the buildings, tools, clay pots, and carved wooden figures you examine are reconstructions of real cultural artifacts. Wood looks heavy. Stone looks cold. The seasonal transitions shift the same locations dramatically - a summer meadow becomes a snow-dusted hollow - and that impermanence carries the game's central theme without a single line of exposition needing to do the work. The ambient sound design layers birdsong, wind, rushing water, and wood creak into something genuinely immersive. The original score, composed specifically for the game, leans on flutes, fiddles, chants in the native language (subtitled), and percussion that only arrives when the story turns tense. Silence and music here feel deliberate, not accidental. Puzzles fall somewhere between light environmental investigation and object-fetch tasks. You examine artifacts, read handwritten notes in a playful font, follow subtle visual cues across the seasonal map, and unlock new cutscene chapters by completing bonfire sequences. Each completed scene can be watched from any angle, and the Ashter narrates naturally rather than reading off objectives like a checklist. Veterans of atmospheric adventures will find the puzzle difficulty comfortable to easy - the occasional fetch task repeated one time too many is a fair criticism. The lack of fast travel also draws player complaints, and legitimately so: the map shows bonfire locations and undiscovered areas, but your own position is not marked, so backtracking requires you to orient by rivers, waterfalls, and familiar structures. A rough first hour is nearly universal across reviews, with most players reporting things click into place only after the second bonfire. If you bail before that, you miss the actual game. The weak links are character models and facial animation, which look stiff against the otherwise gorgeous environment - a budget scar that becomes less distracting once you are invested in the story. There are also occasional performance slowdowns when switching between seasons quickly, and at least some reports of infrequent crashes in those transitions. None of these are dealbreakers for the audience this game is genuinely aimed at. Comparisons to What Remains of Edith Finch and The Forgotten City have circulated in coverage, and both feel apt for different reasons: the former for the way environmental memory-telling carries emotional weight, the latter for the time-loop structure that rewards thoroughness over speed. The creature encounters - drowners, nightwraiths, the Forefathers' Eve ritual, a psychedelic sequence involving Svarog himself - give the mythology real texture beyond decorative flavour. At six to eight hours, it knows exactly when to end.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaSlavic MythologyTime-Travel PuzzleBonfire MechanicsPhotogrammetry WorldEnvironmental StorytellingSeasonal Open WorldFolk SoundtrackNon-Linear InvestigationCreature Lore

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10 (64-bit) or later
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 1050 / AMD Radeon HD 7970 / (2GB VRAM minimum / 4GB VRAM recommended)
Processor
AMD Phenom II X4 975 / Intel Core i5-750 or equivalent

Recomendados

OS
Windows 10 (64-bit) or later
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia RTX 2070 SUPER / AMD Radeon RX 6700 / (8GB VRAM)
Processor
AMD Ryzen 5 3600XT / Intel Core i7-8700

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
The End of the Sun Team
Distribuidora
The End of the Sun Forge
Fecha de lanzamiento
29 ene 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible The End of the Sun?

The End of the Sun está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó The End of the Sun?

The End of the Sun se lanzó el 29 de enero de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló The End of the Sun?

The End of the Sun fue desarrollado por The End of the Sun Team y publicado por The End of the Sun Forge.