Skip to main content

Long read: How TikTok's most intriguing geolocator makes a story out of a game

Where in the world is Josemonkey?

If you click on a link and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. Read our editorial policy.

A Highland Song studio Inkle releases free art adventure The Forever Labyrinth

In partnership with Google Arts & Culture.

A screenshot from The Forever Labyrinth showing a pen-and-ink sketch of an expansive library with real works of art hanging from its columns and walls.
Image credit: Inkle

Inkle, the studio behind the acclaimed likes of Heaven's Vault and last year's A Highland Song, has just surprise-released The Forever Labyrinth, a free browser-based narrative adventure spanning the entire history of art from across the world.

The Forever Labyrinth, which has been made in partnership with the Google Arts & Culture initiative, transports players to an ever-shifting maze of rooms - resembling everything from serene gardens to clifftops, forests, and cellars - as they search for their friend Professor Sheldrake, who's lost amid its mysterious interlinking passageways.

These passageways take the form of paintings and art - "drawn from the collections of great museums who are keen to share their treasures in new and exciting ways online", as the press release puts it - scattered around each room. By collecting clues and identifying elements present within the artwork, players can learn to navigate the labyrinth and hopefully find their friend - if the monster ceaselessly devouring the world doesn't get them first.

The Forever Labyrinth launch trailer.Watch on YouTube

Inkle is calling The Forever Labyrinth a "replayable rogue-like adventure", and says a single play-through will ordinarily take around 20 minutes. However, those wanting to discover all the labyrinth's secrets will need to play through multiple times, according to the developer - and there's a save system in place to record your progress.

The Forever Labyrinth looks to be a pleasingly intriguing thing with plenty of Inkle's usual charm based on my relatively brisk playtime (you can have a go yourself here), and it's a neat way to get some art in your eyes that you mightn't ordinarily see. It's also lovely to have more Inkle so soon after last year's A Highland Song - which Eurogamer's Chris Tapsell called a "a magical sonnet hidden beneath a game" in his four out of five review.

Read this next