User Score
tbd

No user score yet- Awaiting 2 more ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 2
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 2
  3. Negative: 1 out of 2

Review this game

  1. Your Score
    0 out of 10
    Rate this:
    • 10
    • 9
    • 8
    • 7
    • 6
    • 5
    • 4
    • 3
    • 2
    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
  1. Submit
  2. Check Spelling
  1. Nov 23, 2022
    3
    ========
    only worth 2 dollar
    ========
    - 1 hour long.
    -linear bad lvl design walking simulator with little easy code puzzles and bad nonsense story.
    -buy it if u only care about graphics (great graphic and hair).
  2. Jun 25, 2023
    8
    The notorious walking simulator subgenre has a bad rep that doesn’t deserve to be there. Firewatch and What Remains of Edith Finch are only two stellar examples of the quality of such games. Developers HOOK have characterized EDENGATE: The Edge of Life as an interactive experience, but the game is essentially a walking sim, so you know what to expect.

    Does EDENGATE: The Edge of Life
    The notorious walking simulator subgenre has a bad rep that doesn’t deserve to be there. Firewatch and What Remains of Edith Finch are only two stellar examples of the quality of such games. Developers HOOK have characterized EDENGATE: The Edge of Life as an interactive experience, but the game is essentially a walking sim, so you know what to expect.

    Does EDENGATE: The Edge of Life succeed as a narrative masterpiece that will keep you fascinated, or does it fall flat?

    A woman wakes up in a hospital bed with no memory of how she got there or who she is. Despite her memory loss, she is identified as scientist Mia Lorenson thanks to a strategically placed ID tag. Strangely, the hospital looks to have been deserted, and all of the staff members have vanished. Mia, all by herself, must discover the cause of Edengate’s emptiness.
    Expand
Metascore
tbd

No score yet - based on 1 Critic Review

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of 1
  2. Negative: 0 out of 1
  1. 55
    There’s nothing about Edengate: The Edge of Life that’s inherently broken or neglected: the voiced dialogue is serviceable, the music fades into its atmospheric background, and navigating the town of Edengate works well enough despite having so little to do. It’s more a case of a game that desperately needed one of its core elements – be it story, puzzles, or creepy mood – to take charge and step into the foreground, putting a definitive stamp onto the overall experience. Instead, everything is accounted for but nothing makes any waves, so the game ultimately just fizzles out and fades away in a forgettable thud rather than a memorable bang.