Article 66GQ4 Strange Horticulture review – the enjoyably shady business of botanicals

Strange Horticulture review – the enjoyably shady business of botanicals

by
Simon Parkin
from Technology | The Guardian on (#66GQ4)

(Bad Viking; Iceberg Interactive; PC, Switch)
Plants can cure or kill in this atmospheric puzzle game

In Strange Horticulture you enter the tangy murk of a rare plant shop of the same name, inherited from your recently deceased uncle. It's in Undermere, a fictionalised version of Windermere in the Lake District. A few specimens - all fictitious but botanically believable - line the shop's dusty wooden shelves, each one in need of a good watering. Soon your first customer emerges from the shadows with a request for a medicinal plant to help rid them of the voices they hear at night.

You're no expert; instead, you must rely on the reference materials left by your uncle, chiefly, his edition of The Strange Book of Plants, a horticultural guide filled with clues for identifying plants from their scent, the shape of their leaves, the colours of their petals, as well as to remedial properties.

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