Writer vows never to replay Titanium Court after emotional ending

A gaming writer finished Titanium Court last week and chose to leave early, despite unfinished quests and achievements. Overwhelmed by the game's meta narrative on NPC 'staleness,' the writer shut it down permanently and plans never to touch it again. Creator AP Thomson confirmed this reaction aligns with the game's deliberate design.

Last week, the writer completed Titanium Court, an indie game featuring a faerie court where players act as queen. After collecting four keys needed to exit, a point-of-no-return message prompted hesitation amid lingering side quests like lifting curses, helping a cat reach a pantry top, reuniting diregoats, and fulfilling fire prophecies. Yet, the writer departed without finishing, wiping away tears at the final screen. A final walk allowed goodbyes to non-stale faeries before unlocking the gates and distracting the Enemy with a matchmaking ploy, leading to an anticlimactic close at a bus stop with credits rolling. The court washed away with the tide, leaving journal review and a limited match-3 mode but no further progress. Post-credits, the writer joined the Fellow Traveler Discord, learning that staying causes faeries—including steward Puck—to go fully 'stale,' an irreversible state of exhausted dialogue mirroring NPC limitations. This confirmed leaving as the kinder choice, avoiding betrayal of Puck and a worse ending of solitude. Creator AP Thomson told the writer that Titanium Court intentionally challenges completionist playstyles. “I think that there is a mode in which a lot of players play video games that involves basically slurping the whole thing up,” Thomson said. “Seeing everything they’re able to see, unlocking every single achievement, the 100-percent playthrough and everything. It’s a valid way to play games. But on the other hand, I do want to push back against it.” He aims for the game to linger in players' imaginations by leaving parts unexplored, calling it a 'spell' cast on the player to foster acceptance of inconclusiveness. The writer feels deeply attached, likening it to abandoning a beloved book midway or cutting a vacation short. Despite temptation for 10-15 more hours of match-3 puzzling and cryptic quests involving krakens or bee swarms, no return seems possible—even on new files—due to the emotional weight. Thomson noted such responses are the game's core intent, transforming how players engage with fiction.

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