Dinner Date

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GAME SUMMARY

Dinner Date

Rating: 2.9 (12 votes cast)

Julian Luxemburg has prepared a dinner for two at his place – but things go awry when the date does not show up and he is left waiting at his dinner table, the clock’s ticking growing unbearably loud.

„Dinner Date” is the character portrait of Julian: by becoming his subconsciousness you gain a clear vantage point on the worries which take a hold of him. As the wait for the beautiful girl grows longer it becomes evident that Julian’s real problems may not even begin originate the girl: what of his work and his boss? And what of the headhunter, his fascination with Byron and his friendship with Jerry who, all things considered, was ultimately the person who pushed Julian to go on this date?

You are not merely listening – in the unprecedented role as his subconsciousness you tap the table, look at the clock and, as Julian bares more of his mind, reluctantly start to eat, your actions resonating with Julian’s thoughts to form an absolutely singular form of intimacy.

In this manner you will experience „Dinner Date”: with some glasses of wine, some bread, some soup - and with a clock which slowly mocks the constant wait for when she comes, this elusive girl who will solve everything.

Key features:

  • Julian’s story lasts a fully voiced 25 minutes and is told through various unique animations, set in a real-time 3d environment with the unique interface of playing as a subconsciousness, the first of its kind.
  • The game is complimented by an original score, written by Than van Nispen tot Pannerden.
  • At the Independent Game Festival 2011, „Dinner Date” has been nominated for the Nuovo award, an award which ‘honors abstract, shortform, and unconventional game development which advances the medium and the way we think about games.’
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System Requirements

    • OS: Windows® XP/Vista/7
    • Processor: 1.6 Ghz
    • Memory: 1 GB RAM
    • Graphics: DirectX® 9 compatible video card
    • DirectX®: 9.0c
    • Hard Drive: 256 MB
    • Sound: OpenAL compatible sound card

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REVIEWS

Dinner Date review

By ellarunciter posted 13th May 2011

One of the worst 'games' I have ever played.

At first the game kept crashing to my desktop, but when I did get it running, it was like being a counsellor at a screen. Julian moans and moans and moans and, even though I went all the way through the experience, I really wanted to switch off after five minutes. Not really eventful or 'epic' at all.

If you want to be put down from your happy mood from the day and be counsellor to a screen or get depressed, this is your game. Otherwise, no.

The only good thing about this game is the music, which is oke. The rest of it is utter tripe. You spend most of the 'game' quickly pressing keys--and it's sometimes hard to see which key you're pressing at that-- and listening to Julian go on and on and on about how rubbish his life is.

Yes, only a game to play if you want to depress yourself or play counsellor but you haven't got the money to train up.

One to avoid, methinks.

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