I could very nearly see this story as the foundation of a Cyberpunk RPG (mayhaps a text adventure?) with the character(s) as part of the newest....perhaps even the last....generation of this dangerous dystopian city.
The irony of selling yourself piece by piece because you're not ready to let go all at once when the end result is the same. I will never get tired of praising the people behind these productions because the way you bring these stories to life in nothing but voices and still art is magnificent. And the fact that I got more chills watching this than than I do any thriller/horror says a lot so hats off to you guys
Once again I'm astonished by how good this is. I really like how the narrator's voice here helped in conveying - at least for me - the sad, desolate atmosphere that totally fits the ravaged reality depicted in the story, accompanied by amazing art and great music. Great job again !
I liked this one a lot! I think it captured the feeling of a dying and decaying dystopic world (alliteration not intended) well and gave the impression that humanity is on it's way out, only to make room for monstrosities.
I still enjoyed this but honestly it was a bit difficult to understand you at some points. The Man From the Sea was easy for me to parse out each word, even if the audio was crunchier. Still praising things overall, just my take as far as legibility.
@@foghornproductions1101 of course! Looking forward to seeing more content from the channel, the animation is really stellar and these are some great stories!
Being vague is an important aspect of horror, take the babadook or the first alien movie, we don't know what's going on and that scares us It's the unknown aspect that gets us going. But when that horror ends we ( the audience ) are left wanting more of this world we just left, we want to understand. What I'm trying to say is that I want to know more of what happened to cause this.