Donut County launches on PC, PlayStation 4 and iOS on August 28



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Ben Esposito's latest game is Donut County, which combines an adorable aesthetic with a wacky gameplay in which you're a hole in the ground. With the help of publisher Annapurna Interactive, he launches on PC, PlayStation 4 and iOS on August 28th.

Donut County is playful, with raccoons arraigned on scooters and a color palette of friendly sorbet. Beneath its benign exterior, there is also gentrification and the mentality of us-vs-them. In each level, you control a hole in the ground, engulfing pastoral America's small towns and becoming larger and larger. First, you can inhale a few small potted plants, then move on to a huge tractor, until you've finally consumed everything. Unfortunate victims of the hole gather in an underground cave, discussing their misfortune and pointing to protagonist Mira, who works at the local donut shop.

The narrative puzzle seems perfectly suited to the Annapurna Interactive publisher, who has a portfolio filled with creative quirks. He released What Remains by Edith Finch and Jason Roberts' breathtaking puzzle Gorogoa, as well as Keita Takahashi's odd Wattam and Mobius Digital's space adventure, Outer Wilds.

Esposito has worked on a number of well-known games, including What Remains by Edith Finch from Giant Sparrow and The Unfinished Swan and the independent horror title Tattletail, which parodies the Furbies toy of the 90s

Before the launch, the main mechanic from Donut County was copied by developer Voodoo.io, who released a Hole.io mobile game where players take control of holes in the ground and engulf their environment. The developer has already played at other independent games before but unfortunately, Esposito and other indies do not have much legal recourse against him.

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