Ambrosia Sky Is a Really Deep Cleaning Game

Ambrosia Sky is much more than a cleaning game. It is, in a word, heavier. Of course, that comes with the territory when you’re a cleaner in a sci-fi immersive sim about cleaning up sites where people have died, performing their death rites, and fueling a mysterious organization’s tantalizing promises. Like I said, this is more than just another cleaning game.
Ambrosia Sky comes by way of Soft Rains, a new studio that’s amassed talent from all over the games industry to make something that feels quite special. Something that skirts the lines between numerous genres that I happen to admire and also pulls some style from outside of games to deliver a puzzling and meditative experience. But I should back up first.
In Ambrosia Sky, you play as Dalia, a cleaner and scientist for an organization called the Scarabs. The Scarabs employ folks like Dalia who perform death rites for the recently deceased. That is if the person who has passed has consented to also having their body effectively swabbed to be used for the Scarabs’ goal of achieving immortality via the Ambrosia Project. Dalia fled from her home colony at an early age and eventually fell in with the Scarabs, which has successfully kept her from home until she’s eventually sent back to investigate the curious fungal growth that seems to have wiped her birthplace, and most everyone in it, out.
The demo we played at Summer Game Fest, which is also available now on Steam, centers on a mission where Dalia is going to collect the remains of someone she knew as a kid. In order to reach Gerald Parker, the aforementioned figure of her past, Dalia must first rid the space station of the fungus blocking her way. As Dalia, the player is equipped with a blaster capable of hosing the things off, but the player is also welcome to switch between patterns (such as a narrow but forceful stream vs. a horizontal jet) and their choice of ammo, to use a bit of parlance folks will be familiar with. Water is the default choice here, but you are also free to switch between a cleansing fire, or a toggle that shoots a highly conductive putty that can siphon and direct electricity. As is perhaps clear, you won’t just be cleaning up messes in Ambrosia Sky.