Skip to main content

This soothing painting game has serious Bob Ross energy

A town appears half painted in Ete.
Impossible

It’s been a heated summer — and I’m not just talking about the 90-degree weather I’ve been enduring for weeks in New York. Temperatures are running high in the midst of what will likely go down as the wildest election season in the history of American politics. We could all use a little summer vacation from our summer vacations right about now. That makes Été a surprisingly perfect fit for the moment.

A debut project from Impossible, Été is a narrative adventure game that’s all about the joy of painting. It’s a relaxing experience that has players exploring the streets of Montreal, bringing it to life with watercolor paint, and even creating their own art exhibition. It’s a breezy story about discovering a new home that has the comforting energy of Bob Ross.

Recommended Videos

Été‘s story follows a painter who goes on a long summer vacation to Montreal. They’re put up in an expensive, unfurnished apartment with nothing but a bed and their easel at first. Their world is empty — quite literally. As soon as I first step outside, I see that the entire world looks like a coloring book page minus the color. By holding a button and moving my cursor, I start painting the world and restoring its color.

A street appears half-painted in Ete.
Impossible

It’s a simple hook that’s immediately satisfying, but there’s some subtle thematic depth to it. The more I color Montreal in, the more I become intimately familiar with it. When I first step into a big park, I’m totally lost in a see of black-and-white. As I fill it in, I’m also learning how to navigate it. I know it like the back of my hand after a while. It’s like moving into a new neighborhood. It’s all a foreign at first, but all becomes visible the more you go on a walk, eat at a new restaurant, or meet the locals.

That “blank canvas” feeling is a natural fit for Été‘s other gameplay hooks. For one, I can use my easel at any time to create my own paintings. Every single object I paint in Montreal turns into a stamp that I can put on my canvas. I can rotate it, resize it, and even animate it to change its position. That system is a way of making cash, as I can take commissions from locals who want specific paintings, but I can also create for the fun of it and hang pictures up in my house or studio (the end goal is to mount an art exhibition in a refurbished warehouse). The more I discover Montreal, the more it inspires me to create.

A painter paints sunflowers in Ete.
Impossible

My favorite feature, though, is Été‘s apartment decoration component. I can use any money I’ve earned to buy a wealth of furniture that can be placed in my multiroom apartment. It’s a simple system where I call up items from a menu, repaint them, and place them wherever I’d like. My sad apartment quickly begins to feel like a home with each wall lamp or dresser I add to it. Every aspect of Été leads back to that idea of filling in a canvas, building a concise story about building a new life from scratch.

Été is a sincere, optimistic game that reminds us that it’s never too late to start again. Even when it seems impossible to uproot ourselves from our current situations, we can always find a way to make a new home anywhere we land. A blank canvas doesn’t have to be intimidating; it’s an opportunity. It’ll make you want to move to Canada — well, more than you already may want to right about now.

Été launches on July 23 for PC.

Topics
Giovanni Colantonio
As Digital Trends' Senior Gaming Editor, Giovanni Colantonio oversees all things video games at Digital Trends. As a veteran…
Valve has made sharing games on Steam easier than ever
A Steam library filled with custom artwork.

Steam Families is now available to all users, making it easier than ever to share your games library and monitor your child's activity.

The PC gaming platform has had family features for a while, going back to Steam Family Sharing and parental controls like Family View. But Steam Families -- announced in beta in May --  puts them in one hub. It officially went live on Wednesday, and since it's now the weekend, this is a great time to start sharing games.

Read more
Control 2 and more games safe for now after Annapurna Interactive implosion
The main cat from Stray looking into the foreground with cyberpunk buildings behind him

The video game industry was rocked on Thursday with the news that Annapurna Interactive, the publisher behind successful indie and AA hits like Stray and The Outer Wilds, had lost its entire team.

Bloomberg first broke the news, reporting that all 25 members of the team resigned after negotiations concerning the video game division potentially going independent went south.

Read more
I Am Your Beast is the best action game of the year
Harding fires a sniper in I Am Your Beast.

Alphonse Harding isn't a soldier; he's a living weapon.

That's by cruel design. The tortured hero of El Paso, Elsewhere developer Strange Scaffold's latest game, the spectacular I Am Your Beast, was engineered to be a force of nature through a career of military service as a secret agent. Those years of bloodshed shaped him into something monstrous; he's a mix of John Wick and Predator, wiping out entire squads with terrifying speed and efficiency. But there's one thing that Harding isn't: the military's leashed pet. If it's a beast they want, then it's a beast they'll get. Be careful what you wish for.

Read more