
1979 Revolution: Black Friday
A two-hour political thriller built on real testimonies, real photographs, and one of the most underrepresented settings in gaming history. Short, occasionally janky, and quietly unforgettable.
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About 1979 Revolution: Black Friday
I came into this one expecting a history lesson dressed up in Telltale clothing. What I got instead was something quieter and more unsettling: a game that uses the Iranian Revolution not as backdrop decoration but as the entire emotional fabric of the experience. Director Navid Khonsari was a child in Iran during the events depicted here, and that firsthand weight threads through every scene in ways that no amount of production budget could manufacture. You play as Reza Shirazi, a young photojournalist returning from Germany to a Tehran already crackling with unrest. The structure is familiar, a branching-dialogue adventure in the Telltale mold, but the subject matter reframes everything. Your friend Babak pushes for peaceful resistance while your cousin Ali argues that nothing changes without force. Your brother Hossein sits on the other side of the conflict entirely. The moral friction between them is not manufactured drama. It mirrors documented divisions among real people during the revolution, and the game is honest enough to offer no clean resolution. Timed dialogue choices push you to react before you can overthink, which creates the right kind of discomfort when the stakes are this grounded. The photography mechanic is the game's most distinctive touch. When Reza raises his camera and captures a scene, the game places a real archival photograph from French photojournalist Michel Setboun beside your in-game shot. That juxtaposition lands harder than any cutscene could. Pair that with over 80 collectible historical artifacts, including underground cassette tapes, contraband newspapers, and graffiti contextualizations, and you get a scrapbook quality that earns comparisons to Valiant Hearts without ever feeling derivative. The voice cast, which includes actors from Homeland, Better Call Saul, and Argo, delivers performances that keep even the quieter exposition scenes from going flat. The weaknesses are real and worth naming plainly. The QTE sequences are weak across the board, clunky to execute and largely disconnected from the narrative consequences they pretend to carry. The branching choices, while emotionally resonant in the moment, converge back onto a fairly linear path. Multiple playthroughs reveal that meaningful divergence is narrow, anchored mainly in your relationship with Hossein. The visuals were already dated at launch and have not aged gracefully. Some players have reported stability issues on PC. And the game simply ends abruptly, a single chapter of what feels like it should be a longer work, leaving you hungry for a continuation that has not materialized. None of that undoes what the game actually accomplishes. This is a three-to-five hour experience, completionist ceiling included, that treats a genuinely underserved corner of history with care and specificity. Gaming rarely goes here. It almost never goes here this honestly. If you can tolerate lean mechanical depth in exchange for something that actually expands what you know about the world, 1979 Revolution earns your afternoon. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 SP1
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0c
- Storage
- 5 GB available space
- Graphics
- ATI or NVidia card w/ 512 MB RAM
- Processor
- 2.0 GHz Dual Core or Equivalent
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0c
- Storage
- 5 GB available space
- Graphics
- ATI or NVidia card w/ 1024 MB RAM
- Processor
- 2.4 GHz Dual Core or Equivalent
Reviews & Ratings
Game Info
- Developer
- iNK Stories
- Publisher
- iNK Stories
- Release Date
- Apr 4, 2016