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Frequently Asked Questions about Blue Suburbia
What is Blue Suburbia?
Blue Suburbia is a game to play and have fun while you try to escape from the room or outdoor place by using your point and click and puzzle solving skills. You may need to find and use hidden items and clues around, combine some items with other items to use them on correct places, and solve some different types of puzzles.
How can I play Blue Suburbia?
You can play Blue Suburbia game with your mouse and point and click skills to find items and clues, use them on correct places, and solve some puzzles. You can navigate between rooms or screens and you may also zoom on some places to look closer. You may select items from your inventory to use or you may drag and drop them.
How can I solve Blue Suburbia?
You can solve Blue Suburbia game by looking around to find and use items and clues on correct places, combining items, and solving some puzzles. You can also check comments section for hints or ask to other players to get help from them. If you still can't figure out any part of the game, you can also check video walkthroughs.
Can I post hints for Blue Suburbia?
Yes, you can post your comments to share your hints or walkthroughs for Blue Suburbia game to help other players. They may check your hints, if they can't figure out some parts of games. You can also reply and help other players, if they ask for help in comments section. We will all be thankful for your help and hints for the games.
Can I play Blue Suburbia on my phone or tablet?
Yes, like most of new online escape games here, you can also play Blue Suburbia game on your mobile phone or tablet. You just need to visit our website on your mobile device's browser to play games online. We also post and share new mobile escape games to download and play directly on your Android or iOS mobile device.
2 Comments
fascinating!
ReplyDeleteHere's a rap about it from the artist's website:
ReplyDeleteAlthough BlueSuburbia isn’t under development any longer due to time constraints, and the artist keeping-on-rockin’-on with a creative career, the world here (BlueSuburbia) stands as it is. Perhaps one day I will start creating more for it, perhaps not. When I began I was poverty level poor and could barely afford a functioning computer. When I look back at the conditions I lived in, I’m blown away at what I accomplished. Software (Flash) was a choice between food/water/electricity, or a creative outlet. Naturally I chose the latter.
Sound, and music was always an uphill battle since I couldn’t afford the tools for creating my own (although now I do, and make my own \ .. / (-_-) \ .. / ). I ended up pulling together what resources I had, and using the default recorder that came with windows and a cassette recorder to play things back and forth until I got a piece of something usable… It was a desperate situation, but creativity was my relief from it.
At any rate, here you have it. A very personal piece of me.
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BlueSuburbia is the perfect name for this maze of poetry and art that uses the gaming platform as a delivery mechanism for literature.
It is best described as an anti-game because the author believes games to be more than an entertainment medium. BlueSuburbia uses the platform of the 21st century to weave a seemingly infinite web of superb animation hovering in that wonderful territory between wicked and beautiful… It is art freed from the creatively confining restrictions of tangible media, to become a virtual reality that engrosses the viewer with emotional, visual, and musical stimuli, all endowed with artificial intelligence. It is a work of art one no longer passively observes but feels the impact of.
It sounds like a joke but you can literally get lost while wandering down any one of this anti-game’s exquisitely drawn meandering pathways, or corridors of the poetic mind.
The childish, magical feel is BlueSuburbia’s most wonderful quality. It literally sucks you in. The artwork and animation leaves one altogether breathless and curious for what comes next. It has a feel of being from the other side of the looking glass, and gives you the nagging sensation that the rabbit hole is never far off. The Alice in Wonderland quality is mixed with a dark Burtonesque approach to the strangeness of normal life. It’s as if the white rabbit had appeared to, rather than a 19th century little girl, Edward Scissorhands. Toss in a little mindfuck straight from the Matrix, where babies are plugged into a pumping syringe that endlessly injects the facades of society into its brain – and you have successfully described the sunny cul-de-sacs of BlueSuburbia.
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