A collaborative endeavor bringing together Passion Pictures Australia, artist Nathan Jurevicius and game designers Touch My Pixel, Scarygirl caught the eye of casual gamers when it debuted online in April in playable form entirely for free.
In addition to the mesmerizing artwork, the Flash game sports background music by multi-talented illustrator, TV animation director, sound designer and composer Luke Jurevicius.
A self-taught musician based in South Australia, the artist not only recorded the music for the game's moody, offbeat environments but also voiced the various characters Scarygirl encounters through her adorably macabre coming-of-age adventure.
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The story of a peculiar young girl, in an unusual world with a rather remarkable sleeve. This sentence pretty much sums up the narrative behind Scarygirl. It’s a 2D sidescroller with a twist, literally panning around corners as Scarygirl makes her way through the various levels of this storybook world. While I commend Nathan Jurevicius for his creative art style and character creation, I found this puzzler’s learning curve downright frustrating.
Warp Zoned writes:
Scarygirl is a project by Australian artist Nathan Jurevicius. Ambitious and haunting, the graphic novel follows the charming but strange orphaned girl raised by a giant octopus. The graphic novel is full of colorful, trippy illustrations – everything is very dreamlike yet whimsical. One of the most beautiful things about Scarygirl is the complete lack of any dialog whatsoever – speech bubbles have images, and thoughts and feelings are expressed through facial expressions and body language (as much as this can be done in a graphic novel). But everything about it just works – which is sadly not true for the video game adaptation recently released on the PlayStation Network and Xbox Live Arcade.