Cosmic Jazz Adventure Genesis Noir Is as Beautiful and Poetic as Games Get

Would you prevent heaven and earth for the one you love?
That is the question posed by Genesis Noir. In this point-and-click title from Feral Cat Den and Fellow Traveller, the divine pair of desire and fate are melded in a poetic celestial drama depicting the birth of the universe. In it, a detective in a deadly love triangle must decide if he will stop the murder of his lover at the hands of a jealous admirer. This one choice will have eternal implications; as he walks through the fourth dimension through each stage of human evolution, from the Big Bang to the present-day, he explores the mysteries of space and discovers the secret to black holes, opening a path for him to save Miss Mass from Golden Boy’s bullet. Will he protect the sultry jazz singer from her jealous saxophone player, preventing the creation of the universe, or let her die, allowing existence to take form?
While that synopsis sounds confident, I’m still not sure I understand Genesis Noir. It’s a game that has little in the way of traditional storytelling or game structure. The story is spread out over 12 mostly-wordless chapters. Each begins with a small batch of text that, over the course of the game, linearly explains one stage of the birth of the universe. These sections are followed by an interactive stage that metaphorically mirrors its episodic pretense with puzzles, each not so much an intellectual or physical challenge but rather a means to engage with the game’s animations.
Because so much of its story is told indirectly, it’s wide open for interpretation. But whatever that interpretation, the story is beautiful. Its art direction, citing everything from early blackboard animations like 1908’s Fantasmagorie by Émile Cohl to the optical poems of abstract animator Oskar Fischinger, is a crucial part of the formula, evoking an effortless cool of 1930s noir that offers a mystique belying its existential earnestness. The improvisational style of its jazzy soundtrack meanwhile echoes No Man’s disjointed panic as he navigates space and time to stop the inevitable.