Game Reviews

‘Alba: A Wildlife Adventure’ Is An Empowering And Peaceful Journey

Alba: A Wildlife Adventure is a boundlessly cute self-attributed “Chillectathon” about appreciating nature. You play as the titular Alba, cleaning up a small Mediterranean Island while visiting your grandparents for a summer week-long vacation. Alba’s vacation finds profound purpose when the island’s dwindling nature reserve risks destruction from a pushover mayor and money-grubbing real estate developer! Gross!

Alba and childhood friend Ines need to get 50 signatures from island residents in order to save the nature reserve. With the help of a diverse and lively cast, Alba sets off to learn about the value of conservation, and the beauty of nature.

Developer Ustwo Games captures a pure essence of child-like wonder and summer time energy in Alba: A Wildlife Adventure. Exploring the island is incredibly fun, and the game’s main mechanic of snapping pictures of the island’s vast wildlife never gets old. Alba’s Pokedex-esque smartphone made me feel like a real explorer as I classified the dozens of species that share the island with its human residents.

Among your classification and petition goals and adding to the “chillectaton” name, Alba has several side duties like clearing trash and rebuilding bird houses to make the island more beautiful bit by bit. Even though the game talks about Alba’s eventual return home, you have as much time as you need to explore the island and get your signatures.

Alba: A Wildlife Adventure is unexpectedly intelligent in how it doles out its central dilemma. While the idea of an overzealous real estate tycoon is nothing new, some island residents are reluctant to sign your petition for surprisingly rational reason. A very real, modern debate in conservation and environmentalism is the increase of jobs and money that comes with commercial land development. Those reluctant islanders think that the new real estate will spark island tourism and make the local businesses a lot richer. Alba is incredibly fair and tactful in explaining their position on conservation and its coexistence with land development.

With music by Lorenzo AlvarezAlba is endlessly cheery. Paired with Alba’s memorizing walk-cycle, I found myself aimlessly exploring for longer than I would have expected. The admirable amount of polish on Alba shows in the precise detail given to every square inch of the game’s island. The game’s bouncy and light art-style compelled me to explore every alley and alcove before I was done.

Alba and Ustwo puts their conservation message to work saying on their website that, “For every copy of the game ‘Alba: A Wildlife Adventure’ that is downloaded or sold, one tree will be planted in Alba’s Forest.” Alba’s Forest is ustwo’s (currently runaway successful) Ecologi.com page where they record the number of trees planted on their behalf. Also involving themselves in several other charities, and committing to “social and environmental performance, transparency, and accountability,” Ustwo is an admirable force for good.

Ustwo and Alba: A Wildlife Adventure are masterfully successful in delivering their environmental message and I feel wiser after playing their game. It’s not often that I walk away from a game feeling like I’ve done good for the world. Beyond the tree planted from my purchase of the game, Alba: A Wildlife Adventure has inspired me to slowdown and appreciate what makes our world beautiful.

Alba: A Wildlife Adventure is available now on PC and Apple Arcade. PS4/5, Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch ports are planned for Spring 2021.

Like
Like Love Haha Wow Sad Angry
Brandon Mumei

View Comments

Recent Posts

‘Hytale’ Bought Back By Its Original Creator

The much-anticipated Hytale, a Minecraft-inspired sandbox RPG, is being sold back to the game's original…

2 days ago

Could ‘Half-Life 3’ Finally Be Upon Us?

Hold on, don't leave just yet. We know this sounds like another fruitless rumor that…

3 days ago

‘Guild Wars’ Gets Reforged This December

The 2005 RPG Guild Wars is getting re-vamped on December 3. This week, ArenaNet and…

4 days ago

Hero 45, AKA Vendetta, Slashes Into ‘Overwatch 2’

Blizzard Entertainment dropped the announcement trailer for their newest character, the Italian damage hero Vendetta.…

5 days ago

‘The Finals’ Developer Embark Find The Key To Success In the Shooting Game Industry

From day one, the Swedish game developer Embark has set out to make games ten…

2 weeks ago

First Images Of The ‘Legend of Zelda’ Movie Dropped Online

The first look at our heroes, Link and Princess Zelda, has entered the Hyrule Kingdom.…

3 weeks ago