Three years ago, everything was about to change for tiny Australian studio Witch Beam. It was gearing up to launch its second game – a game about unpacking boxes and finding a space for your things. Unpacking, it was called. And the hope was it would build on the success of the studio’s first game, Assault Android Cactus, an energetic twin-stick shooter which did relatively well. But there was trepidation, because how many people would want a chilled-out game about placing objects? How many people would understand what it was trying to do?
Witch Beam needn’t have worried. In just a year, Unpacking raced to a million sales – far, far beyond anything Assault Android Cactus had done. It rocketed the studio to fame. Eurogamer awarded Unpacking Game of the Year in 2021, and Unpacking won awards including two gaming BAFTAs. For Witch Beam, it was an unmitigated success. “It’s been life changing,” co-founder Sanatana Mishra tells me now. “We spent a decade pursuing our creative passion while measuring every tiny decision against the possibility of becoming destitute at the end of that road you go down, and that was a difficult time. We traded on our youth and our health in a way that’s only really possible once or twice in your life. You can’t just keep doing that. And then now, overnight, after 10 years of doing that, we suddenly didn’t have to really think about that part of it any more. So that was life-changing for everyone on the team and everybody we work with. It’s been fantastic.”
And now the team is back with a new game called Tempopo.
Tempopo is as different to Unpacking as Unpacking was to Assault Android Cactus. It’s a puzzle game again, yes, but this time it’s about guiding bouncing creatures around dense garden obstacle courses while music bops around you. “Planning and execution is the loop that the game has,” Mishra explains, who created the concept with his friend Seiji Tanaka, who was once an animator on the legendary game Journey. They came up with the idea at a game jam while thinking about “evolutionary dead ends”, of all things. Think sabre-toothed tigers. “Why does that die out but not a different animal?” Mishra asks.