Broken Age is a puzzle adventure game featuring double protagonists.
Great Characters
Great Graphics/Art
Great Music
Great Story
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Story & Themes
Broken Age features two separate protagonists, which the player can switch back and forth between. Shay is a young man living on a spaceship with an overprotective “mother”—the ship’s computer—and no way out. Vella is a young woman who is about to be sacrificed to a monster named Mog Chothra in a celebratory feast. Both Shay and Vella struggle to break the bonds of their fates, and each embarks on their own journey. When their stories intersect, some dramatic truths are revealed about the universe in which these two live.
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The major themes of Broken Age include growing up, rebelling, and finding one’s own agency. Both Shay and Vella wish to break free of the cycles they are in, and they do so by questioning the status quo and performing actions that those around them do not condone. Both characters are innately good, however. The story's many adults are (mostly) not evil, but they do have some fundamental misunderstandings about the kids and teens in their lives. Broken Age shows that it's possible to love someone even when you don't "get" them.
Save Points
Broken Age is saved at the start of each screen, or can be saved manually from a pause screen menu at almost any time.
Difficulty
Some of the puzzles in Broken Age are quite tricky, especially in the second half. You'll probably need a pen and paper.
Heads Up!
Violence The game features some mild implications of violence. In Vella's world, for instance, young women are sacrificed to a giant monster and eaten—the result is more comical than anything, and there is no blood or graphic violence of any kind. There is no fighting in the game.
Scary Imagery Some very young children may be frightened by the monster in the game.
Sex & Nudity The naked backs of two characters are seen flying away on a bird, but their lower halves are not visible. Also, selective breeding is referenced a few times, often described as "an unspeakable act." It's never explicitly explained, but as it's a plot point, kids might have questions.
Strong Language Broken Age has its share of crude humor (jokes about "stool," for example) but no objectionable language.
Conversation Starters
- Do you think it was okay for Vella to risk the lives of her town’s people in order to save her own?
- Shay clearly feels that he is being overprotected, but it’s true that he is safer within the ship’s routine—is it okay to sacrifice safety for excitement or meaning?
- Have you ever felt like Shay and Vella, trapped in a cycle? Have you ever felt like the people around you just aren’t listening or understanding what you want or need?
- What did you think of the Dead Eye Druids' ending?
- Why would the Thrush create such a complex scheme? Did it remind you of any historical events?