Grunn is a normal gardening game set in a mundane village, according to the Steam blurb. It is not at all weird and horrifying, not remotely a glimpse into the abyss. Moments after first arriving off the bus you won’t find yourself trapped in the garden by a bridge with a rotten plank. You won’t accidentally murder a magpie while chopping down tall grass. And you thoroughly be stalked by a nameless tormentor as you go about your gardening work.
Grunn
Publisher: Sokpop CollectiveDeveloper: Sokpop CollectiveAvailability: 2024Download the demo on: Steam
Okay, thankfully for everyone I can’t keep that up. Grunn is weird: deliciously, horribly weird, and while I don’t want to spoil too much, I can at least tell you that you’re in for a surprise. The game’s made by Sokpop, after all, the tiny collective whose games like to subvert expectations. Also, the atmosphere is thick and menacing from the off.
So I arrive in Grunn and I head into a garden. I find my way to a shed where there’s a bed to sleep in and a note from the owner of the garden, who’s asked me to tidy the place up by Monday. I need to tidy the grass, water the plants, get rid of molehills and pick up trash. Oh, and sort the hedge. All basic gardening stuff.
Grunn plays it straight for quite a while after that. Get shears to chop the grass, pick up bits of rubbish by hand, use a trowel for sorting out the molehills. There’s a completion meter in the bottom corner and, while the garden isn’t large, it’s a complex space filled with secret corners. There are locked doors, too, and Polaroids, and a gate leading to a nearby church which I eventually manage to get open.