Indieventure
Join three friends as they embark on an adventure to discover the best indie games! Hosted by Rebecca Jones, Liam Richardson and Rachel Watts. Episodes released fortnightly!
Join three friends as they embark on an adventure to discover the best indie games! Hosted by Rebecca Jones, Liam Richardson and Rachel Watts. Episodes released fortnightly!
Episodes
Thursday Aug 22, 2024
Episode 21: The Vault - Our First Indie Game Loves (Recorded In-Person!!)
Thursday Aug 22, 2024
Thursday Aug 22, 2024
This week sees all three of us being extra excitable since — for the first time ever — we got to record an episode in-person! The lack of Discord delays and occasional internet outages really takes the energy up a notch, you'll no doubt be pleased to know. Since it's been the best part of a year since we were last able to get together in person, naturally the first thing we did when we were in the same room again was watch the Ace Attorney movie, which of course we have to discuss a bit before getting into today's main topic.
The prestigious Indieventure Vault is back for its third consignment of the very best indie games we know! This time the selection criteria we settled on was indie game first loves: the very first indie game that each of us can remember being swept away by, quite possibly before we even knew what indie games were in relation to the wider games industry.
Today's trio of vaultworthy games have the common factor of having been released in the span of less than a year between 2012-2013. Was this when indie games suddenly became more readily accessible thanks to the rise of digital storefronts? Or is this just a stark reminder that we're all now firmly in our early 30s? You decide as we each make our cases for the first indie game we ever fell in love with: Journey, the minimalist desert exploration adventure about coming to terms with impermanence (Rebecca); Hotline Miami, the maximalist introspection on ultraviolence as entertainment (Liam); and Proteus, the minimalist deserted island exploration walking sim about impermanence and introspection (Rachel).
Liam also (jokingly, we think?!) suggests inducting Peggle into the Vault, which nearly leads to Rachel committing a hate crime.
Moving on to hyperfixations! Rachel has been playing cute airborne exploration sim slash critter collection game Flock, which has easily cracked her already oversubscribed GOTY contenders list for 2024. Rebecca documents the recent significant moment in her long-term hyperfixation on Danganronpa when she finally finished the series' massive main story arc. And Liam has bought himself an unpronounceable retro handheld game console, which is double the fun because he gets to figure out how to get all his old games working on there and then actually play them again!
Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic. Meanwhile, you can support the podcast by leaving us a 'like' and nice review on your podcast platform of choice, follow us on Twitter @indieventurepod, and visiting our website: indieventurepodcast.co.uk.

Thursday Aug 08, 2024
EXTRA: An interview with Coal Supper, the developers of Thank Goodness You’re Here!
Thursday Aug 08, 2024
Thursday Aug 08, 2024
This week, we’re trying something different on Indieventure: an interview!
We’ve wanted to interview developers on the podcast for a while now, especially those responsible for games that mean a lot to us. We’ve been talking about how we might do this since the days of [REDACTED PODCAST], but have always struggled to find a way that feels right. You see, the thing we love the most about Indieventure is that it’s basically just a long, chaotic Discord call that we publish to the wider world. However, that’s not a vibe that’s very - let’s say - compatible with a traditional interview format. The thought of forcing a developer to sit quietly while we talk about squash for 40 minutes feels borderline illegal, to be honest.
So, instead, we’ve decided to split interviews away from the main podcast and release them as smaller "bonus" episodes like the one you’re listening to today. As you may have noticed, this one is actually being released in a regular slot (none of us were free to record this week, soz), but moving forward the plan is to release them in between regular episodes.
The first instalment in this new series is a conversation with Will Todd and James Carbutt, the co-founders of Coal Supper!, who recently released Thank Goodness You’re Here! to critical acclaim.
We hope you enjoy this inaugural episode of our interview show, and we’ll be back next episode with our usual nonsense!
Thursday Jul 25, 2024
Episode 20: Our Mid-Year Best Indies Check-In 2024
Thursday Jul 25, 2024
Thursday Jul 25, 2024
Wow, how are we halfway through 2024 already?! No need to point out that we're actually closer to 60% of the way through the year by the time this episode is released; better late than never! Yep, it's time for our GOTFHOTY nominations, also known as Games Of The First Half Of The Year, but Rebecca is very proud of having potentially originated an acronym that could totally enter common parlance if people were just willing to give it a chance.
Not quite as formal as our totally scientific Christmas GOTY list, GOTFHOTYs are when we name a bunch of games we can see ending up making our respective top fives depending on what happens between July and December. Rachel's been playing a bunch of great indies and so has already got a few good ideas as to what her end-of-year-list will look like, suggesting that Lorelei and the Laser Eyes, 1000xRESIST, Animal Well, and the newly-released Dungeons of Hinterberg are all up there at the moment. Liam gives nods to Balatro and Crow Country, of course, but Minishoot' Adventures makes for a surprise new frontrunner for him. Rebecca's had a much slower start to her year in terms of GOTY candidates, but has so far been most impressed by Little Kitty, Big City and Cryptmaster.
We couldn't very well call it a proper mid-year check-in if we didn't also look forward to what the Q3/Q4 release schedule is looking like, and so in this episode's second half we collectively rattle off a few games we're excited to hopefully play before the year's out. We can't say for sure yet how we'll feel about the full games, of course, and who knows what surprise releases will turn our heads this autumn? But as it stands, we reckon that Flock, Cataclismo, The Crush House, Demonschool, Phoenix Springs, The Rise of the Golden Idol, Sorry We're Closed, and Dreamsettler have the best odds of upsetting the current rankings.
Much like the midpoint of the year, hyperfixations roll round much quicker than you'd expect. Bafflingly, Rachel has never seen Buffy the Vampire Slayer before, but now she's bingeing the show for the first time, which allows Liam and Rebecca to conduct some fascinating research on the only remaining millennial geek not to know this franchise inside-out. Liam has been watching Couples Therapy, a TV documentary series that is decidedly not a reality TV show, thank goodness. Rebecca's been swept up by her day-job hype for Zenless Zone Zero, but was also very excited for the new Hildegard von Blingin' song that dropped just a few hours before recording. Somehow, this turns into a friendly disagreement between her and Liam about whether Fall Out Boy's 2023 modernised cover of We Didn't Start the Fire was good or cringe. (But since Rebecca writes the episode descriptions, allow me to abuse my privilege to set the record straight: it's both. We're both right.)
Finally, for all you folks who love a full and proper account of every game we mention in an episode even when it's not connected to the main topic, know that our GOTFHOTY discussion and mid-year check-in also wanders into the territories of Ace Attorney Investigations Collection, Baldur's Gate 3, Boyfriend Dungeon, Harold Halibut, The Last of Us Parts I&II, Loco Motive, Resident Evil and Resident Evil 4, Steamworld Heist 2, Thank Goodness You're Here!, and Tiny Life.
Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic. Meanwhile, you can support the podcast by leaving us a 'like' and nice review on your podcast platform of choice, follow us on Twitter @indieventurepod, and visiting our website: indieventurepodcast.co.uk.
Thursday Jul 11, 2024
Episode 19: Next Fest and Chill, a.k.a. what we've been playing this summer
Thursday Jul 11, 2024
Thursday Jul 11, 2024
Unbelievably, it's been almost exactly five months since the Indieventure trio last checked in and just chatted about what we've been playing recently — and with June being a touch busy, what with it being Pride Month and our need to arrange travel plans both real and fictional, we totally missed a Steam Next Fest in there too. Time to fix both of those oversights with a laid-back episode which, I'm afraid, is going to put several new games on your wishlist.
Liam has been going all vigilante in noirish imsim Fallen Aces, having a surprisingly relaxing time stacking shelves in Supermarket Simulator, and kicking things with his gremlin leg in Anger Foot. Rebecca's found herself sneaking around an oil rig filled with Lovecraftian monsters who are curiously eager to show their many faces in Still Wakes the Deep, and reliving her days as a librarian restocking shelves and getting creeped out by an empty building (please, please be empty) in Amanda the Adventurer 2. Rachel's had a bit of a busman's holiday in journalistic sci-fi visual novel Times & Galaxy, and mixing it up a bit with nonlinear mansion exploration puzzle Blue Prince. Rebecca and Rachel both also played Crush House, which appeals to both of them on a deep level but for very different reasons, Rachel being all about its pitch-perfect reality TV spoof and Rebecca loving how it creatively deconstructs life sims and dating sims.
In our latest hyperfixations, Liam and Rachel have had something close to a spiritual awakening listening to Charlie XCX's Brat album on repeat. Rebecca can't quite match their energy on this occasion, but does put forward a good case for Audible-exclusive '00s cult comedy revival Green Wing: Resuscitated.
Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic. Meanwhile, you can support the podcast by leaving us a 'like' and nice review on your podcast platform of choice, follow us on Twitter @indieventurepod, and visiting our website: indieventurepodcast.co.uk.
Thursday Jun 27, 2024
Episode 18: Planning our indie game summer holiday tour
Thursday Jun 27, 2024
Thursday Jun 27, 2024
The UK is enjoying its annual two weeks of good weather and so the Indieventure crew have decided to get together and plan an indie game (well, indie-led) summer holiday! That's right, it's another list episode, featuring a whistlestop tour of some of the greatest vacation destinations in video games according to, as it turns out, three potentially nightmarish travel companions.
Our dream trip turns out to include stops in: Abzu, Anemoiapolis, Animal Crossing: Wild World, BioShock, Book of Travels, Botany Manor, The Coin Game, Danganronpa 2, Dishonored 2, Doomsday Paradise, Dorfromantik, En Garde!, Everybody's Gone to the Rapture, Final Fantasy VII, Firewatch, Five Nights at Freddy's, The Good Life, Half-Life, A Highland Song, Hooked On You, Huniepop 2, The Last of Us, The Legend of Zelda, Let's Build A Zoo, Overboard, Paradise Killer, Parkasaurus, Placid Plastic Duck Simulator, Pokémon Crystal, The Quarry, Resident Evil, Roman Sands RE:Build, A Short Hike, Star Birds, Stardew Valley, Strange Horticulture, Thank Goodness You're Here, Thimbleweed Park, Until Dawn, and The Witness.
In hyperfixations, Rachel has again turned her attention to tabletop gaming and has been greatly enjoying Spots, a card game where you roll dice and apply their dots to a variety of cute dalmatians. Liam has been playing Destiny 2: The Final Shape, reminding him once again that he actually really likes Destiny 2 sorry-not-sorry. Rebecca has been very busy but nevertheless the announcement of Life is Strange: Double Exposure is giving her life.
(Note: We had to record this episode further in advance than usual, which is why you won't hear anyone getting excited about the Ace Attorney Investigations Collection — don't be alarmed, normal service will undoubtedly resume in the next episode.)
Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic. Meanwhile, you can support the podcast by leaving us a 'like' and nice review on your podcast platform of choice, follow us on Twitter @indieventurepod, and visiting our website: indieventurepodcast.co.uk.
Thursday Jun 13, 2024
Episode 17: Pride Month Special (even gayer than usual)
Thursday Jun 13, 2024
Thursday Jun 13, 2024
Happy Pride Month, Indieventurers! Regular listeners to this 100% LGBTQIA+-fronted podcast will know that we're not exactly quietly closeted for the other 11 months of the year, but this June we've elected to challenge ourselves to make an episode that is our gayest yet. This takes the format of an open-ended chat where we discuss everything from our favourite queer characters and stories in indie games, to some maybe less-than-flawless examples of queer representation (be it explicit or just heavily implied) that we still love, to games that maybe don't have any reference to gender or sexuality at all but which still have such gay energy you'd swear they were developed exclusively by drag queens.
We also chat a bit about our early memories as queer gamers in the '90s and '00s, and naturally the conversation occasionally veers into favourite AAA franchises that make at least a bit of an effort to be inclusive, even though indie games are definitely where it's at for this topic. Oh, and of course we couldn't let the opportunity pass us by to talk a little bit about our favourite gay lawyers and just what exactly makes the Ace Attorney franchise so very blatantly queer despite technically having no properly out characters.
Fans of our rapid-fire conversational shifts are about to eat well as this episode takes us on a whistle-stop tour through literally dozens of our favourite queer-themed, queer-developed, and/or queer-coded games and franchises, including: Ace Attorney, Danganronpa, Doki Doki Literature Club!, Fashion Police Squad, Frog Detective, Gone Home, Goodbye Volcano High, If Found…, In Stars & Time, The Last Express, The Last of Us, Life is Strange, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage, Mediterranea Inferno, The Missing: J.J. Macfield & the Island of Memories, Paradise Killer, Paralives, Resident Evil 3 (no, really!), The Sims, Simulacra, Slime Rancher, Sucker for Love: Date to Die For, Telltale's The Walking Dead, Thomas Was Alone, Tiny Life, Unpacking, Videoverse, and A Year of Springs.
In this episode's hyperfixations, Liam is fascinated by the concept of building your own internet away from the dubious influences of corporate social media, and recommends checking out sites like Thinky Games and McMansion Hell if you want a return to the good old days of reading about strangers' niche interests in their own personal style of communicating. (Pssst, you should also check out sevenoutoften.co.uk and indieventurepodcast.co.uk if you want to see some sites that Liam has quite literally built himself!) Meanwhile, Rebecca has been reminded of the important work Devcats always do in keeping her mental health in check during stressful times, as she's been navigating a pile-up of life events with the help of their most recent hidden object game, A Tower Full of Cats. Finally, Rachel took our own advice from the last episode and played Crow Country in Exploration mode, and has been very happy with the result.
Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic. Meanwhile, you can support the podcast by leaving us a 'like' and nice review on your podcast platform of choice, follow us on Twitter @indieventurepod, and visiting our website: indieventurepodcast.co.uk.
Thursday May 30, 2024
Episode 16: Indie May-hem (send help)
Thursday May 30, 2024
Thursday May 30, 2024
TOO MANY GREAT GAMES RELEASED IN MAY. Don’t get us wrong, we love being bombarded with cool indies but, MY GOD, May has been wild. In this episode, the Indieventure gang sit down to chat about this phenomenon and get into which games they played out of the torrent of releases.
Liam’s been exploring a creepy abandoned theme park filled with monstrous weirdos in the survival horror game Crow Country and brushing up on his spelling in the fill-in-the-blank dungeon-crawler Cryptmaster. Rebecca flirted with cute monsters (classic Rebecca antics) in horror dating sim Sucker for Love: Date to Die For, while also enjoying the fun animal hijinks of wholesome exploration game Little Kitty, Big City. Rachel went spelunking in a subterranean labyrinth filled with strange creatures in Animal Well and had her brain fried by the intense puzzle powerhouse that is Lorelei and the Laser Eyes. She also checked out 1000xResist and cried over alien invaders, sad clones, and mommy issues. The gang finishes up this bumper crop of indie picks with a discussion about Hades 2 which released into Steam Early Access this month.
To wrap up the episode it’s hyperfixations! Rebecca binged season 5 of Fargo which has taken a refreshing new direction from its other seasons, Liam took a nostalgia trip watching Jackass Forever, and no hyperfixation from Rachel this episode as she’s been resting. Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic.
Thursday May 02, 2024
Episode 15: Indie games we missed from 2023
Thursday May 02, 2024
Thursday May 02, 2024
There are two groups of people who agree that the year really ends in April: finance nerds, and gaming award show nerds. No points for guessing which the Indieventure crew belong to as we deep dive into our impressions on awards season now that 2023 is officially done and dusted with the conclusion of the BAFTA Game Awards! Expect some spirited discussions of the indie greats of last year including Viewfinder, Venba, Chants of Sennaar, Tchia, Jusant, Goodbye Volcano High, and many many more, as well as the obligatory sidetracks into Baldur's Gate 3 chat and of course, Dave the Diver.
But that's not all! We three are never ones to allow some remote authority to dictate our discussions, which is why each of us has brought along a game that we'd like to belatedly add to our own 2023 GOTY list! It's an eclectic bunch, as Liam submits Trepang2 — a retro FPS published last summer by Team 17 that the other two somehow never even heard of, let alone expected Liam to pick for this. Rachel goes rogue by choosing Paranormasight: The Seven Mysteries of Honjo, a game commissioned and published by Square Enix (and therefore about as indie as Dave the Diver) but which strangely released with so little marketing that we've decided it falls within our remit of informing you about great games you might otherwise miss. Rebecca has finally played The Cosmic Wheel Sisterhood, and fully agrees with Rachel's assessment back in December that it belongs on our 2023 GOTY list, tardily elevating it to a respectable second podium behind our jointly-agreed-upon favourite, Dredge.
We end, as always, with our hyperfixations! Rachel recently saw actual play troupe Dimension 20 live in London, and thinks that to be honest this might be her thing for a good long while. Liam has got back into Fallout 4 — not because of the TV show and actively in spite of the dodgy new-gen upgrade, but just because he felt like it, which is a very Liam way of going about things. Finally, Rebecca is back on the Rusty Lake train, thanks in part to our recent episode on single-sitting indie games leading to her getting her whole family hooked on the series.
Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic.
Thursday Apr 18, 2024
Episode 14: Is Harold Halibut 2024's gaming babygirl?
Thursday Apr 18, 2024
Thursday Apr 18, 2024
It's been a while since the Indieventure crew did a group review, but here we are at last once again, this time having a proper gander at newly-released (by the time you hear this, anyway) stop-motion narrative adventure game Harold Halibut. Drawing its inspiration from mid-20th century TV — namely an unusual blend of hard sci-fi and gentle animated comedy shows — Harold Halibut proved somewhat divisive among the Indieventure trio, although we find it so hard to argue with each other even when we disagree that once again we end up negotiating a reasonable middle ground. What can I say, sometimes we're so wholesome it's sickening. But thanks to our lively exchange of ideas, there's a good chance that you'll come out with a well-informed impression of whether Harold Halibut is a game for you or not.
This episode also contains a mini review of Pepper Grinder, a new pixel-art 2D platformer and the latest outing for the linchpin indie publishers at Devolver Digital. Does it have cronch? Stay tuned for the verdict from our resident pinecone-munching expert.
And last but not least, hyperfixations! In a break from tradition, Rebecca doesn't want to talk for long about how much she's been hooked on The Cosmic Wheel Sisterhood of late, because she's literally been playing it for our discussion next episode and that would defeat the point. This leaves Liam and Rachel plenty of time to swap reality TV recommendations: courtesy of Liam we have Channel 4's latest social experiment The Underdog: Josh Must Win, while Rachel presents us with South Korean game show The Devil's Plan on Netflix, which turns out to have been way better than the second season of Physical 100.
Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic.
Thursday Apr 04, 2024
Episode 13: Our favourite short indie games that you can play in a single sitting
Thursday Apr 04, 2024
Thursday Apr 04, 2024
Little known fact about the Indieventure crew: we're all pretty tiny. Like, 5'9" at the outside, the types who really need a tall friend to accompany us to the supermarket so we can reach the interesting condiment jars that always seem to be hanging out on the top shelf. So, short queens/king that we are, of course we stan a short indie game. How could we not? Just like us, they're perfect the way they are, taking up exactly as much space as they need to make their point without feeling the need to be all imposing (on your precious free time).
Moving on from that metaphor before the thread gets lost entirely! We've separated this episode into time-based categories, starting with indies that take two or three hours to complete, including Anemoiapolis, Birth, Industria, Lily's Well, Nuts, Penko Park, Pupperazzi, A Short Hike, Umurangi Generation, and A Year of Springs; as well as various games in the Devcats and Rusty Lake franchises.
Next up are some of our favourite one-hour indies, like Chop Goblins, The Exit 8, and Morph Girl, as well as the individual games that make up the Frog Detective trilogy; Rusty Lake's sister series Cube Escape; and the early works of solo Birth dev Madison Karrh.
Squeezing our way down to indies in 30 minutes or less or your pizza's free (disclaimer: I do not actually have the authority to grant you a free pizza, sorry), it turns out we've got a surprising number of recommendations to offer in this particular bracket. We urge anyone who fancies playing a game from start to finish over their lunch break to check out David Lynch Teaches Typing; Dr Langeskov, The Tiger, and The Terribly Cursed Emerald; Localhost; Pebble Witch; Pet the Pup at the Party; Pineapple on Pizza; Puzmo; Teenage Blob; or any of Deconstructeam's short offerings on Itch, with a special mention going to Eternal Home Floristry if you're too overwhelmed by choice to know where to start.
Finally, if you're looking for a miniscule indie game that can be played in just 5 minutes or so, look no further than psychological horror walking sim September 1999. And if your tastes run to indies so small they can only be viewed under a microscope, we end by recommending Morning Makeup Madness and Queers in Love at the End of the World, both of which last just 10 seconds.
Before we're done, though, there's time to have a quick chat about longer indie games nevertheless handily divisible into single-sitting runs, including Balatro, Deep Rock Survivor, Slay the Princess, Vampire Survivors, and (of course) the Monster Prom games.
We end, as ever, with our latest round of hyperfixations! It's a broad category this episode, which sees Rachel bingeing all three seasons of Netflix's adaptation of A Series of Unfortunate Events; Rebecca hooked on the recently-released fantasy/mystery novel "Voyage of the Damned" by debut author Frances White; and Liam discovering that YouTuber City Planner Plays is every bit as good as Bob Ross for some educational ASMR.
Our music was written and performed by Ollie Newbury! Find him on Instagram at @newbsmusic.






