Lil Gator Game and the Game of Life

When I was little I never wanted to play with any of the neighborhood kids. If they came by asking my mom if I could come out with them, I would beg her to tell them I wasn’t home or I wasn’t allowed to. I was perfectly content with my own company—playing with my dolls, writing stories, or building things out of scrap wood I stole from my dad. The girls in my neighborhood were all older than me, often too old for make believe, and that was fine, but I still preferred the imaginary games I invented with my friends at school. So, at home and in the absence of my school friends, I chose to play alone.
This time last year I was halfway through my senior year of college, and I found myself wondering again what game I was going to play both on my Nintendo Switch and in my life. Should I finally pick up Spiritfarer or go to graduate school? Should I start working full time or take a stab at a title I’d seen floating around, Lil Gator Game? Despite being in limbo, I wasn’t too worried about who I would play with. Being an antisocial kid has led to being a selective adult, so I have a general faith in the strength of my relationships. I knew I’d find ways to stay connected with my roommates once we all moved out, and I had people who were always down for a Lil Gator Game session, so rather than worry about graduate school I set out to help the little gator with his own struggles.
The goal of Lil Gator Game is to help the titular little gator get his big sister to play with him like she did when they were children. This is achieved by traversing the island on which the game is set to solve puzzles, complete timed trials, play through obstacle courses, and beat mini games. You skateboard around waterparks and vanquish enemies made of cardboard, slowly but surely rebuilding the imaginary childhood games that you and your sister used to play.
The first time I played Lil Gator Game, I was mostly struck by how lovingly it frames the act of play and creation. As someone who also grew up playing with their older sibling and creating my own games, I felt connected to the little gator every time he invented a story or built something out of cardboard or begged his big sister to play with him. Lil Gator Game was, to me, a celebration of childhood and imagination. It still is but, coming back to it a year later, I find myself focusing on a different aspect: friends.