![]() A scientist ends up in a planet covered in water and finds a mobile suit with an A.I. If science fiction is your thing, you might enjoy In Other Waters. It doesn't require shooting or combat or stuff like that, but it does feature more environmental traversal and more linear-looking "quests". Be advised though, it's a bit more active than Pentiment. It has a mystery that you need to walk around a loop-like structure, like Pentiment, to figure stuff out. The Forgotten City is a game where you stumble upon (and end up getting stuck in) what seems to be a Roman city that has survived to modern day. Neither has dialogue between player and NPC, but both have very fun and interesting stories (and dialogue) between the parts being investigated, in such a way that, I think, you'd end up having a nice time piecing stuff together, even if through a different avenue. They're both detective games through and through, but both of them kinda let you "do it wrong" and fail forward. Going by what you said, maybe you'll find The Return of the Obra Dinn and The Case of the Golden Idol a bit constraining. ![]() It's more of an RPG Life Sim a la Tokimeki Memorial and Long Live the Queen, where you have a lot of skills to manage and NPCs to interact. If you like walking around a small town but you also like for time to pass, check out I Was a Teenage Exocolonist. It's actually one of the major inspirations of the game, so you might find a lot of similarities - down to how certain parts of the plot evolve. You play as Mae Borowski, a 20 year old who's coming back to her small town in the rust belt of Possum Springs after dropping out of college. If you like walking around a small town every day and chatting and chilling with people, check out Night in the Woods. The ones people mentioned (Disco Elysium, Paradise Killer), and also:
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