June Rewards - The latest new games for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - June 11, 2021

It's June, so its time for a new wave of Subscriber Rewards - We have Chivalry 2, Necromunda: Hired Gun, GRAVEN, King of Seas, Grand Casino Tycoon and More. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more

read more

Dating a Gamer: If You Can’t Beat Them, Join Them!

Posted By: Jennifer - June 01, 2021

Dating a Gamer: If You Can’t Beat Them, Join Them! How many times have you heard the phrase “my boyfriend is attached to his Xbox!” or “all my partner wants to do is play online with their friends!”? I am Jenny, and here is my story and my experience dating a Gamer. Both complaints are very familiar to me as someone who works with a lot of people in their mid-20s. While I completely understand the frustratio

read more

Our May Rewards for you 2021

Posted By: GamerDating Team - May 06, 2021

It's May, summer is right around the corner, so its time for a new wave of Subscriber Rewards - MotoGP 21, Evil Genius 2: World Domination, Turnip Boy Commits Tax Evasion and Orbital Bullet. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. Th

read more

April Game Rewards with your first Subscription

Posted By: GamerDating Team - April 07, 2021

It's April, Spring is here, so its time for a new wave of Subscriber Rewards - We have Paradise Lost, Can't Drive This, Cartel Tycoon, Ranch Simulator and Star Dynasties. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we'

read more

Our March Rewards for you 2021!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - March 05, 2021

    It's March, Spring it around the corner and, so its time for a new wave of Subscriber Rewards - We have Volta-X, Superliminal, Sword of the Necromancer, Elite Dangerous and More.   It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with y

read more

GTFO Review - Coop or Die

Posted By: James - February 04, 2021

GTFO.. coordinate or die. Sometimes people can mistake style for substance. It's a really simple mistake to make, you think that the shiny thing will equal some degree of approximation to what you were expecting to take away in value from the idea of the shiny thing in your head. There's loads of examples of this, like when you rewatch that kids TV series you remember so fondly as an adult only to realise that if you watched anymore

read more

Our 2021 New Year January Rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - January 13, 2021

It's 2021, Happy New Year to everyone! We have a huge set of new games available to kick off the new year - Death Stranding, Planet Zoo, Kingdom Come: Deliverance and Command and Conquer Remastered. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premi

read more

Fort Triumph Review

Posted By: Ryan - December 16, 2020

Rarely do I enjoy physics-based gameplay so much. As 4X, tactics games go, Fort Triumph is a largely enjoyable entry to the genre. Before going into the meat of the review, I want to state something straight away: this is NOT the game for you if you’re interested in a serious, expansive game in the same vein as the XCOM series. If you’re interested in a more light-hearted, but still challenging, take on the genre, this might just b

read more

Our December rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - December 02, 2020

It's December, and with the celebration cheer - We have a huge set of new games available - Secret of Mana, Jackbox Party Pack, Final Fantasy VIII, Offworld Trading Company and Train Simulator 2020 just to mention a few. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundl

read more

Superliminal Review - A puzzle game with vision

Posted By: Ryan - November 09, 2020

A puzzle game with vision Superliminal is one of those rare gems: a puzzle game that doesn’t outstay its welcome and leaves its mark in the form of a lasting message. Following the grand tradition of games like Portal that slowly and, more importantly, clearly introduce game mechanics and The Stanley Parable that use narration from external sources to offer a commentary on the world around the player rather than the character, Superlimin

read more

Vaporum: Lockdown Review - Steampunk Dungeon Crawler

Posted By: Ryan - October 26, 2020

Dark, grimy and constricting, take a break from all of the problems of real life in this polished dungeon-crawler. All joking aside, the rather well-timed, in the UK at least, release of Vaporum: Lockdown proves there is still life in the niche dungeon-crawling genre. Eschewing the usual confines of the dungeons from which the genre gets its name, Vaporum: Lockdown is a prequel to 2017’s Vaporum and, as such, requires no previous kno

read more

Our October rewards for you and Prize Winners!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - October 12, 2020

It's October, so its time for a new wave of Subscriber Rewards - We have Space Engineers, Life is Strange 2, Phoenix Point, Children of Morta and More. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more

read more

Battletoads 2020 - Hopping Mad Review

Posted By: Ryan - September 28, 2020

With a hop, skip and jump into the absurd, Battletoads is the game we need right now. And really, why wouldn’t it be? At its core, this is a very simple game and that has allowed the developers to polish it. The UI, such as it is, conveys all it needs to: remaining health, remaining ammunition and (if you are doing poorly) the respawn time. At any point, you can check the top of the screen to see how each toad is doing and, with three playab

read more

Our September rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - September 03, 2020

It's September, so its time for a new wave of Subscriber Rewards - We have Fallout: New Vegas (Ultimate Edition), LEGO: Marvel Super Heroes, Little Bug, FURI, Styx: Shards of Darkness, Tabletop Simulator and more. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle

read more

Creating and Inspiring During a Pandemic: Animal Crossing New Horizons

Posted By: Jennifer - August 20, 2020

Creating and Inspiring During a Pandemic: Animal Crossing New Horizons This year has been a strange and scary one for everyone across the globe. We now find ourselves thrust into a new world of social distancing, self-isolation, washing hands and wearing masks. It has been a terrifying time no matter who you are, young or old, rich or poor. Yet gamers have had a bit of a respite with multiple games launching and into this apparently bleak land

read more

Maid of Sker Review - Welsh Folklore Horror!

Posted By: Ryan - August 12, 2020

A tense dive into Welsh folklore that may have crept into my ‘top games of the year’ list. It’s quite possible that the Sker Hotel should be up there with the great buildings of gaming and pop-culture. Taking cues from the Spencer Mansion and Mount Massive Asylum, Wales Interactive have crafted a detailed hotel which it is mostly a delight to explore in an effort to slowly reveal its secrets. Maid of Sker is one of those s

read more

Our August rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - August 01, 2020

It's August, so its time for a new wave of Subscriber Rewards - We have Fell Seal: Arbiters Mark, Ori and the Blind Forest, Barotrauma, The Sims 4, Jedi Knight Collections and more. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription, and each month we update the selection. With every first subscription, you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month

read more

Our May rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - May 29, 2020

Huge restock including: Warhammer: Vermintide 2, Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire, Temtem, Borderlands 2 (GOTY), The Sims 4 and Risk of Rain 2 It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games, restocked nearly all our previous choices and t

read more

Sentinels of Freedom Review - Superhero Xcom?

Posted By: Ryan - May 06, 2020

A superhero-themed tactics game that nails the comic book feel, for better and for worse. Right from the start, Sentinels of Freedom (named for its titular superhero team) is a treat to look at. Cell-shaded panels of static images and text take the place of animated cutscenes and the character models are vibrant and varied enough to pop from the detailed backgrounds. This is a game that embraces the comic book aesthetic that has fuelled other

read more

Resident Evil 3 Remake and Resistance Review - Two games, each a mirror of the other. For better or worse.

Posted By: Ryan - April 17, 2020

Two games, each a mirror of the other. For better or worse.   Make no mistake, Resident Evil is here to stay. At least, that’s what Capcom wants us to think. After a dearth of high quality, AAA survival horror games in recent years, the Resident Evil 3 (RE3) / Resident Evil: Resistance (RE:R) double-pack could not have come out at a better time.   Riding the coat-tails of last year’s excellent Resident Evil 2 rem

read more
1 2 3 4 ... 25 26
GD
User
Password
Forgot your password?

Password Reset

We've sent you an email, please copy/paste the code we sent you to the password reset token box, then create a new password below it

Email
Help We'll send instructions to this email
Password
Help Enter code from email we sent you
Password
Help Enter your new password
Password
Help Confirm your new password

Pupperazzi, cute game of dog photography

Posted By: Ryan - January 26, 2022

Game

A wholesome, casual video game for lovers of dogs and photography everywhere.

This review was written based on my experiences playing the Xbox Game Pass version on an Xbox One X.

Pupperazzi has a simple premise: take pictures of adorable dogs. That’s it. There’s no overarching story, there’s barely any lore to speak of, and that’s okay. The world has been a dark place in the past few years and sometimes it’s nice to sit down for a few hours, walk around a handful of small locations and take pictures of dogs.

Considering the game is built around a visual medium, it should be no surprise that how it looks is where a lot of the focus seems to have been spent. Colours and textures are smooth, almost cartoonish, the 3D models are simple but varied and the colour palette changes to suit the time of day (more on that later). Everything here is simple, basic, and, above all, clean. A lot of indie games find their own graphical niche and style, and Pupperazzi is no different. Most everything in the game world is easy to identify from a distance, many different breeds of dogs can be found in the humanless world the game takes place in and, perhaps most importantly, there is very little screen clutter to distract from the UI, such as it is.

Pupperazi is kinda like Pokemon Snap

The currency scattered around isn’t always so… obvious.

 

The UI itself is a treat (pun not intended). It would have been too easy for the developers, Sundae Month, to clutter the screen with the various different prompts, options, and variables available in a game entirely about photography. Instead, by burying those option in a menu, you are presented with only the details you need at any one time: how many more photographs you can take before the film runs out, what film you have selected, and whether or not you can interact with something. When you switch to camera mode, the screen also displays the control prompts you need to swap between portrait and landscape and how to zoom in and out, as well the zoom level itself.

The downside to this means that all of the many film and lens options, each of which allows you to alter the colour balance of your photographs or apply a variety of graphical filters, are kept in a menu interface designed for mouse and keyboard. On several occasions, I found the input from my controller was either dropped or duplicated. Whilst hardly a game-ruining experience, it was slightly annoying and spoke to an implied assumption about the platform Pupperazzi would be played on. The interface itself is serviceable and easy to understand, just clunky on the platform I was using.

‘Clunky’ can best sum up the UX as well. Due to the necessities of the control scheme on a controller, the B button cancels all the menus but not the camera mode. All too often I would habitually press B to lower the camera and crouch instead. The controls are fine, if a little floaty, and you have the basics here: a sprint, a jump, and a crouch. The game world is simple enough that I never got lost or trapped, although some surfaces function as bounce pads without the game telling you so, and you are never told you can walk on water although it is necessary to do so.

I present: the Visible Invisible Wall!

The lack of tutorial means you can spend more time petting dogs.

The best of the UX for me was how Pupperazzi presents its objectives. Each map has four different versions, based on different times of day, and each version has different objectives presented as requests from fans of your dogNET account—a social media site built around dog pictures, surprisingly. For some reason I cannot work out, the developers chose to make some of these objectives hidden until you select them without requiring any extra effort than pressing your platform’s select button, whilst others need to be picked up in the world. Most objectives, whilst clearly displayed in the request list, provide some context about why a certain character wants them which is displayed over two text boxes. If you navigate to the hidden request and press the select button to reveal it, it will proceed to the second text box; the first is readable as soon as you highlight the objective, even if the objective itself isn’t. It’s clunky and served as a minor irritant throughout my time with the game.

You can probably tell by the fact I haven’t yet mentioned it, but the music and sound design is fine. It’s nothing special, but it isn’t bad by any means. It’s a perfect accompaniment for the game, no more and no less.

But what about the game itself? By now, you’ve probably figured out the basics. The world map allows you to travel between different areas, each of which (bar one) has four different times of day to choose from. The time of day affects the weather, the dogs’ activity and the objectives you are required to complete. Each map also contains objects you can pick up to help you, and picking one up unlocks it for use in all the maps. Objectives require taking pictures of dogs in specific locations, certain outfits or doing particular things and none are terribly demanding. Fulfil enough objectives, and upload enough pictures to dogNET, and you unlock the next area of the game. As a gameplay loop, it is simple, it has great precedent, and it kept me engaged enough that I didn’t notice the time passing.

Casual game of taking pics of doggos has questionable controls at times

This is the entire game world. Selecting the space shuttle is far harder than it should be with a controller.

 

That was until the crash happened. Somewhere around the 75% complete mark, my game crashed and I lost a lot of progress. Pupperazzi relies on autosaves to keep track of your progress and, for whatever reason, it didn’t work. Luckily, the game is so short, around two to three hours depending on how distracted you get by the adorable dogs, that it took only fifteen minutes or so to get back to where I was, but it still irked me. Fortunately, this was the only time the game crashed during my play session. After finishing, I decided to go back and take a few more pictures to fill out the Puppypedia, a collection of specific photographs that are optional collectibles, and it crashed three times from the main menu. I still don’t have those photographs.

I should point out though, that crashing issue was my main problem and I was playing on the day of release. By the time you read this, it is likely the bug has been fixed, or may not even affect you. Such is the way of software. There were also a few instances of items falling through walls, but I was always able to recover them easily.

Moments before the autosave feature betrayed me.

There are, of course, some nuances to the gameplay beyond merely taking photographs. The dogs react to the items you can pick up: they’ll chase thrown bones or RC cars, sit for treats, and dance next to stereos, for example. You can even, on the Muttropolis map, push a dog in a swing. Perhaps best of all though, is the ability to pet the dogs. If you like a particular dog enough to want to feature it in your photographs, you can pet it and it will follow you around for a short period.

More of a sandbox than an open world, Pupperazzi is a delight to explore.

Writing, as you can probably figure out, isn’t terribly important here. The objectives are easy to understand and the characters providing you with them are all distinct, but that’s really it. That isn’t necessarily a bad thing though, as Sundae Month could just as easily have provided a list of objectives on the HUD and left it at that. There is some sense of progression provided by the barebones writing, although the amount of satisfaction you will get from it is largely down the type of person you are.

If you’re just looking to pet the dogs, this is probably going to work for you. If you want answers about where the humans are, who built the humanorphs (robots) or where the ghost dogs come from, you’re going to leave unsatisfied.

Wholesome options for wholesome games

Thoughtful gestures like this are finding their way into more and more indie games.

 

As mentioned above, the game itself is pretty short in terms of time to complete, but, much like New Pokémon Snap, which I almost got through the entire review without mentioning, the draw here is returning to take more pictures and to see what the random behaviour of the dogs results in. For those who care about such things, the achievements aren’t terribly difficult, mostly they boil down to getting a certain number of photographs at certain time of day or similar. You will likely make good progress towards them purely by playing the game casually.

Games as open-ended as this are always a little difficult to value but I feel the £15.49 price tag on Steam (at time of writing) is a little high if you’re only going to play it through until you finish the objectives and then never return. It is slightly cheaper in the Xbox store, where it is £12.99, but again, that might be a bit more than I would happily play for a single playthrough.

If you’re looking for a relaxing, wholesome experience that asks little of you and presents a bright, aesthetically pleasing world populated almost entirely by adorable dogs, Pupperazzi is for you. If you’re looking for something that tests your brain, is driven by a strong narrative or has large, complex environments to explore, I recommend you look elsewhere.

Pupperazzi knows what it wants to do and, for better or worse, does it pretty heckin’ well.

Petting dogs is the best thing to do :D

Sometimes you have to use your uncomfortably long arm to pet the dog skateboarding into a wall.

Are you barking up the wrong tree with this game?

Is it for you?

If you grab it or try it, share some pics with us on Twitter :D

GamerDating

© 2024 Gamer Dating LLC

  • Articles
  • Contact Us
  • Press
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Affiliates
  • The Mission
  • Support
  • FAQ

Begin my quest

User
Help GamerDating.com is a community of adults looking for real relationships. We ask that you use your real name.
Email
Help Your email is safe with us - we won't spam you.
Password
Help Please input a secure password, we recommend Uppercase, lowercase, numbers, symbols, and at least 8 characters but it's not a requirement — be secure
Password
Help You've got this. Verify your password ;).
Your gender
Your Gender
  • Female
  • Male
  • Agender
  • Androgynous
  • Two-spirit
  • Gender Fluid
  • Gender Nonconforming
  • Gender Questioning
  • Genderqueer
  • Intersex
  • Pangender
  • Trans Man
  • Trans Woman
  • Transmasculine
  • Tranfeminine
  • Bisexual
  • Other
Help Select the gender that you would say you identify with
Their gender
Their Gender
  • Female
  • Male
  • Agender
  • Androgynous
  • Two-spirit
  • Gender Fluid
  • Gender Nonconforming
  • Gender Questioning
  • Genderqueer
  • Intersex
  • Pangender
  • Trans Man
  • Trans Woman
  • Transmasculine
  • Tranfeminine
  • Bisexual
  • Other
Help Who are you looking for?
Help Choose your date of birth. Members must be over 18. Or in some states over 21

By registering, you understand and agree to the terms of service