HomeFeaturesBetrayal At Club Low

The RPS Advent Calendar 2022, December 9thIt’s pizza, but not as you know it

It’s pizza, but not as you know it

A cartoony drawing of Horace The Endless Bear, in a Santa hat and snuggled by/atop a fireplace, regarding three Christmas stockings hung above it. Each contains something from a different game that came out this year

Roll three dice and get all 3s! Yeah! Worm eyes! That must mean it’s day 9 of the RPS Advent Calendar. But wait a second. There’s something funny about your dice. You cheatin' me? Oh, hang on, they’re just pizza dice. Well inthatcase.

What could it be but some Cosmo D? Have a ball inBetrayal At Club Low!

Betrayal At Club Low - Official TrailerExtremely normal club, why do you ask?Watch on YouTube

Betrayal At Club Low - Official Trailer

Cover image for YouTube video

Alice0:Most RPGs are too long. Most games are too long, but RPGs especially. Initial excitement will boil away as premises stretch thing, repetition develops, and busywork becomes evident. How wonderful, then, to play a two-hour RPG set around one nightclub in a world I already adore.

Trying to steal car keys in a Betrayal At Club Low screenshot.

All of which is to say: as you overcome challenges and uncover secrets, you’ll come to carefully consider the best approaches to challenges and the best emotional state in which to tackle them, then roll a huge handful of dice representing things including: a DJ being rattled because you told him his mum’s in the audience; someone hating you because you botched cooking his stew; your own embarrassment; puddle breath because you drank from a puddle; the dancefloor liking your dance moves and loving the free booze you scored them; your snazzy jacket; and a sinking feeling that you’ve really, really screwed up your big escape. It’s quite clever and quite fun how much gets reflected in these dice.

DJing with pizzas as records in a Betrayal At Club Low screenshot.

I’ve always adored Cosmo D’s invitations to visit Off-Peak City through gentle adventure games, and I’m delighted that this latest trip had an interesting dice system to master on top of the usual wonders. And the usual wonders are, as usual, wonderful. I adore the look of these games, this garish and confident bricolage. As ever, the music from Cosmo D himself is fantastic. Once again, I enjoy how he tells stories of people’s lives running the gamut from little human moments to the exploitation of workers and commidification of creativity. And as we learn more about another shady corner of Off-Peak City, it raises just as many questions as it answers. What a fantastically weird place.

What I most like about the size of Betrayal At Club Low is that this is a rare RPG where I will do everything. I will talk with everyone, I will tackle every quest, I will attempt to complete everything—and I will enjoy it. Too many RPGs have two hours of good bits hidden unpredictably as rewards throughout a 90-hour scavenger hunt. I’ve even replayed it on the higher difficulty mode which adds unpredictable dice, and tried to find all the endings.