Compare Welcome to Elk prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Triple Topping. Published by Akupara Games. Released on 9/17/2020. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Indie. Metacritic score: 82/100.

Three hours of Nordic folk tragedy, drunk karaoke, and real people's hardest memories packed into a hand-drawn island that somehow earns every gut punch it throws at you.

I went in expecting a quirky walking sim and came out the other side quietly sitting with someone else's grief. Welcome to Elk is a biographical adventure from Copenhagen-based Triple Topping, and the premise is deceptively simple: you play as Frigg, a young carpenter arriving on the remote island of Elk for a summer apprenticeship. The island is small, the community is tightly knit, and everybody has a story. What the game does not advertise loudly enough is how genuinely those stories hurt. Structurally, each in-game day functions like a chapter. You walk Frigg around a mostly linear map, talk to the island's eccentric residents, and every so often land in a minigame uniquely designed around the story being told. These are not filler. A karaoke sequence at the island bar, The Hermit, lets you freely pitch Frigg's voice against live instruments, and the sound mixing is good enough that you feel it. A grim Simon Says melody is played out before a character recounts a murder. A squirrel trap gets assembled with someone who may or may not believe the entire island is purgatory. The minigames rarely repeat and never block your progress, which is the right call. Triple Topping uses them to punctuate emotion, not test reflexes. The meta layer is where Welcome to Elk becomes something genuinely unusual. After major story beats, the game hands you written accounts of the real events that inspired them, and in a handful of cases a live-action video appears: an unscripted, unpolished recording of the actual person telling their memory to a camera. No actors. No scripts. It is the kind of raw documentary texture you do not see games attempt often, and it works because the fictional framing has already softened you up. The visual design aids this: characters and interactable objects are rendered in color against a stark white world, focusing your attention and giving the whole island a half-colored children's book quality that sits in deliberate tension with how adult the subject matter gets. The soundtrack runs country, folk and gospel underneath it all, with ambient details like footsteps changing texture by terrain and the creak of old wooden buildings doing quiet, careful work in the background. Fair warnings, because this game earns a content note rather than just a genre label. The subject matter includes alcohol abuse, sexual violence, death of animals, and children witnessing murder. The tone lurches between warm comedy and genuine distress with little warning, and some critics found the tonal whiplash destabilizing. That is partly the point. Life on a small Nordic island does not sort its comedy and tragedy into separate folders, and Welcome to Elk refuses to either. Keyboard controls are reportedly stiff compared to a controller, and the game auto-saves by day with no manual option, which can be frustrating if heavy content hits you mid-chapter and you need to step away. At roughly three to four hours, it knows exactly when to end. This one is for players who want a game to treat them like an adult without making them solve puzzles to earn the right to feel something. It sits naturally alongside Oxenfree or Night in the Woods in terms of pacing and emotional register, but the biographical DNA makes it feel less like fiction and more like sitting in a pub at last call while someone you just met tells you the realest thing they have ever said out loud. That is a specific kind of experience, and Triple Topping pulls it off with craft and genuine respect for the people whose stories they are carrying. Kai, Scout Team

Welcome to Elk
AdventureIndie

Welcome to Elk

Sep 17, 2020Triple ToppingAkupara Games
GamerScout Says

Three hours of Nordic folk tragedy, drunk karaoke, and real people's hardest memories packed into a hand-drawn island that somehow earns every gut punch it throws at you.

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About Welcome to Elk

I went in expecting a quirky walking sim and came out the other side quietly sitting with someone else's grief. Welcome to Elk is a biographical adventure from Copenhagen-based Triple Topping, and the premise is deceptively simple: you play as Frigg, a young carpenter arriving on the remote island of Elk for a summer apprenticeship. The island is small, the community is tightly knit, and everybody has a story. What the game does not advertise loudly enough is how genuinely those stories hurt. Structurally, each in-game day functions like a chapter. You walk Frigg around a mostly linear map, talk to the island's eccentric residents, and every so often land in a minigame uniquely designed around the story being told. These are not filler. A karaoke sequence at the island bar, The Hermit, lets you freely pitch Frigg's voice against live instruments, and the sound mixing is good enough that you feel it. A grim Simon Says melody is played out before a character recounts a murder. A squirrel trap gets assembled with someone who may or may not believe the entire island is purgatory. The minigames rarely repeat and never block your progress, which is the right call. Triple Topping uses them to punctuate emotion, not test reflexes. The meta layer is where Welcome to Elk becomes something genuinely unusual. After major story beats, the game hands you written accounts of the real events that inspired them, and in a handful of cases a live-action video appears: an unscripted, unpolished recording of the actual person telling their memory to a camera. No actors. No scripts. It is the kind of raw documentary texture you do not see games attempt often, and it works because the fictional framing has already softened you up. The visual design aids this: characters and interactable objects are rendered in color against a stark white world, focusing your attention and giving the whole island a half-colored children's book quality that sits in deliberate tension with how adult the subject matter gets. The soundtrack runs country, folk and gospel underneath it all, with ambient details like footsteps changing texture by terrain and the creak of old wooden buildings doing quiet, careful work in the background. Fair warnings, because this game earns a content note rather than just a genre label. The subject matter includes alcohol abuse, sexual violence, death of animals, and children witnessing murder. The tone lurches between warm comedy and genuine distress with little warning, and some critics found the tonal whiplash destabilizing. That is partly the point. Life on a small Nordic island does not sort its comedy and tragedy into separate folders, and Welcome to Elk refuses to either. Keyboard controls are reportedly stiff compared to a controller, and the game auto-saves by day with no manual option, which can be frustrating if heavy content hits you mid-chapter and you need to step away. At roughly three to four hours, it knows exactly when to end. This one is for players who want a game to treat them like an adult without making them solve puzzles to earn the right to feel something. It sits naturally alongside Oxenfree or Night in the Woods in terms of pacing and emotional register, but the biographical DNA makes it feel less like fiction and more like sitting in a pub at last call while someone you just met tells you the realest thing they have ever said out loud. That is a specific kind of experience, and Triple Topping pulls it off with craft and genuine respect for the people whose stories they are carrying. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:aaaBiographical AdventureFMV ElementsTonal WhiplashMinigame AnthologyNordic SettingMature ThemesAuto-save OnlyController RecommendedWalk-and-Talk

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
Intel HD 4000
Processor
Intel i5 Quad-Core

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
82

Game Info

Developer
Triple Topping
Publisher
Akupara Games
Release Date
Sep 17, 2020

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Welcome to Elk is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Welcome to Elk released?

Welcome to Elk was released on 17 September 2020.

Who developed Welcome to Elk?

Welcome to Elk was developed by Triple Topping and published by Akupara Games.

Is Welcome to Elk worth buying?

Welcome to Elk holds a Metacritic score of 82/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.