"I’ve begun my voyage in a paper boat without a bottom; I will fly to the moon in it.
I have been folded along a crease in time, a weakness in the sheet of life.
Now, you’ve settled on the opposite side of the paper to me; I can see your traces in the ink that soaks through the fibre, the pulped vegetation.
When we become waterlogged, and the cage disintegrates, we will intermingle.
When this paper aeroplane leaves the cliff edge, and carves parallel vapour trails in the dark, we will come together."

Not sure why this popped up in my head again, but back then, I was instantly gripped by it.
The narrator was so haunting, so many things didn't make sense first, but somehow came together.
And while it wasn't a game in the traditional sense and more of a walkable audiobook, a short story to experience by exploring a remote island, it was worth it.
#dearesther
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8NlWiXzanNI

Dear Esther Trailer

YouTube