


A new room, new toys, and new stickers are available now in the game, as an expression of the developer’s gratitude.Īn adventure and farming simulator game, Snacko merges 2D pixel art with soft 3D art on a mysterious and supposedly deserted island. It’s a cathartic means of communication and connection in especially stressful times, and developer Ziba Scott revealed that more than one million letters have been written in the game. Kind Words released last year, and it’s about sending and receiving letters from players all over the world to help them with their worries.
TOEM ART EXHIBITION PC
The studio says it’s coming “pretty soon” to PC and Xbox One. Plus, there’s loads of customisation in this game, from the player’s appearance to their home, and a comedic cast of characters in this fantasy land. They have their own personality and abilities, and engage in dance battles with other teams of Ooblets. The titular Ooblets are little creatures grown in the player’s garden. Glumberlands’ Ooblets will enter early access soon, and if you’re a fan of Pokémon, Animal Crossing, and/or Stardew Valley, you’ll want to keep tabs on this one. Tree Interactive states that this game will launch in Q2 2021. In this dying world, the protagonist Watt tries to help everyone he meets, and attempts to “find meaning in his last days.” There is combat and puzzles to solve, and the muted shades of the world are a little reminiscent of Twilight Princess. It’ll launch in this year.Įrrand Boy is actually a game about the apocalypse. The characters are a group of young friends seeking to save their local arcade from shutting down, and the game promises ‘90s goodness in aesthetics and hijinks galore. From developer Subliminal Game, Button City is a vibrant world of anthropomorphic animals, and though they don’t live on islands, they live in pretty dioramas for the players to scroll through. "The English translation of the word gaagal is ocean, so the totem for the Gumbaynggirr people and the people who I'm from, the clan totem, is the ocean or water," he said.With no further ado, let’s get into it.


His first solo exhibition, in June 2016, followed the death of his much-loved grandmother and focused on connection to country.Ĭarey said his surfing background and connection to the Gumbaynggirr saltwater people had influenced GAAGAL. He said it had only been in the past three years that he moved into painting and telling the story of his mother's people, the Gumbaynggirr.Ĭarey said that was when he started to understand himself better and where he was from, in particular his Indigenous heritage where his creativity stemmed from. Art helps surfer understand his heritageĬarey now lives between Byron Bay and Coffs Harbour.
TOEM ART EXHIBITION PROFESSIONAL
He got into professional surfing after high school in Coffs Harbour and spent a stint in California and in Sydney. The 29-year-old said his GAAGAL exhibition, which opens next week at the China Heights Gallery in Surry Hills, merged his contemporary optical art style with the Gumbaynggirr people's traditional forms and techniques. He has also recently done a project for a Google website. Otis Carey won this year's Australian Indigenous Surfing Titles at Bells Beach and does art work for Billabong, which sponsors him. An Aboriginal artist and professional surfer who grew up in Coffs Harbour is about to open an exhibition in Sydney, focusing on the ocean as a totemic symbol of his people, the Gumbaynggirr.
