The Best Game I Played At PAX Turned Me Into a Bee

There are a lot of flashy, innovative, over-the-top games to debut or make a showing at PAX West each year. My favorite of 2018, though, is a relaxing educational simulator meant for both kids and adults, one that portrays the humble but lively world of the common honeybee.
Entitled, predictably, Bee Simulator, the game was designed by Varsav Game Studios and led by Polish developer ?ukasz Rosi?ski, who sought to make a game that would educate its audience on the life of a bee while providing a soothing, almost therapeutic, atmosphere for the player to enjoy. Inspired in part by Rosi?ski’s passion for the game Flower, Bee Simulator is the work of a team of 18 developers (10 of whom are women), with a lilting orchestral soundtrack mixed by Steve Kempster (an industry veteran who has worked on everything from Abzu to The Banner Saga 2) and composed by Miko?aj Stroi?ski, who wrote the music for The Witcher 3 and The Vanishing of Ethan Carter.
Bee Simulator features three modes, one of which will allow a sort of “freeplay” that showcases the tranquil qualities of Flower that Rosi?ski wanted to recreate, harkening back to the many relaxing hours he used to spend playing the game after long days at work. There’s a single player, story-driven campaign, a split-screen local multiplayer mode and a mode called free flight, where the player can fly around a Central Park-inspired location, and explore it at their own pace while racking up collectibles and achievements. The format allows the game to address both the educational and the relaxing qualities of Bee Simulator, while separating them just enough that the more leisurely aspects can be enjoyed on their own.