Well, there is a turn here. Instead of making a film based on blockbuster games like Minecraft or Super Mario Bros, someone created one based on $ 4 walking simulator that you can finish in about 25 minutes. And just based on the trailer, it looks much more loyal to source materials than most game optimization.
The film and the game based on which are called exit 8, and they are both centers based on a kind of backroom. In game By Japanese developer Kotek Create, you are trying to get out of a Tokyo Subway Station Corridor. There are some framed posters on your left, at your right door, and overhead fluorescent lights. Walk to the end of the corridor, make some turns, and you get yourself back in the same corridor.
But it’s not Extremely The same corridor, most time. Some details of the corridor have changed: perhaps one of the three doors is missing, perhaps the exit indication is inverted, maybe the pattern on the tile looks different. Or perhaps absolutely Nothing Has changed.
The rules posted on the wall of the tunnel are simple: if you notice a change (the game calls them anomalies), then turn around and walk back the way you came. If you do not see any discrepancies, go ahead. To get out and avoid the tunnel, you have to choose eight times in a row correctly. Choose the wrong, and you start.
Exit 8 is a clean mixture of 8 backbacks and spot-the-daffves, and it is extremely unstable: some anomalies are absolutely creepy, and by the way, you are not alone in that tunnel. There is a partner with a briefcase that is running through the same corridor in the opposite direction that ignores you completely – most of the time, at least.
It sounds like a difficult game to make a film, but director Jenki Kavamura has added some story elements, including a phone call with some life -changing news to the nameless main character, before he got himself stuck in this bizarre looping tunnel. We also see a child in some shots from the trailer – in the game, you are alone with a stranger and are with a briefcase.
The most difficult part of the game is when it seems that there are no discrepancies and you begin to invent something. “Was the tiles different? Did that poster say last time? Is there something closed about Roshni?” As a steam reviewer said: “Pay four dollars to get a gallit for an hour.” (This is a positive review.) I am interested to see how self-doubt of the film.
Exit 8 (The Film) is screening at Festival Day Cannes this month and will be released in August. Exhaust is 8 (sports) SteamyI have included the game trailer below, so you can compare it to the trailer of the film on top of the page. Both of them are very strange.

