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Curator's Shelf

Pocket Worlds

Small games with enormous presence

Not every world needs to be huge. These ones fit in your bag and still feel like proper places, with their own ecosystems and atmosphere you'll think about later.

Picks

  1. ANIMAL WELL

    Every screen is its own room, and every room is hiding something. The OLED makes the whole thing glow like a lantern in your hands.

    Overwhelmingly Positive · Mex$ 290.00
  2. TUNIC

    A world you decode rather than read about. The manual isn't separate from the game - it is the game.

    Very Positive · Mex$ 334.99
  3. Citizen Sleeper

    A station, a few friends, and a clock that won't stop. The whole universe ends up being the space between conversations.

    Very Positive · Mex$ 227.99
  4. Chants of Sennaar

    Five civilisations stacked in a tower, five scripts to learn. Every floor is another world to figure out.

    Overwhelmingly Positive · Mex$ 143.99
  5. Blue Prince

    Every day a new mansion, and always the same mansion. The world is the puzzle.

    Very Positive · Mex$ 334.99
  6. Braid, Anniversary Edition

    A handful of rooms, but the world-building does more per square foot than most things ten times its size.

    Very Positive · Mex$ 227.99

The argument

A small world built with care is bigger than a big world built without it. These games don’t scale through sheer size. They scale through detail, and through the sense that every inch was thought about by somebody.

Animal Well is one connected map you could walk across in a few minutes, hiding decades of secrets. Tunic teaches you a language and a geography without ever writing a sentence of tutorial in English. Citizen Sleeper has maybe thirty named characters on its station, and you’ll end up remembering all of them. Chants of Sennaar fits five civilisations into a tower you climb across a few evenings. Blue Prince folds a whole manor into a deck of rooms. Braid is older than most of this list, but it set the template: a world feels whole when every piece of it lines up with every other.

The Deck is the right shape for these. A seven-inch screen rewards intimacy more than scale. You sit close, and the world feels close back.