While its 72% "Mostly Positive" rating on Steam reflects its success as an educational tool, it is not a "fun" game in the traditional sense. It is short (roughly 1 hour long) and intentionally designed to be a "horrible" experience to drive home its message of accessibility. A Familiar Fairytale Dyslexic Text Based Adventure on Steam
: Reviewers from Buried Treasure note that the game is an "extraordinarily effective achievement" in fostering empathy for a struggle many people never physically experience.
The game follows a small fox through a classic fairytale world of Kings, Queens, and witches. However, the "difficulty" lies entirely in the presentation of the story: A Familiar Fairytale Dyslexic Text Based Advent...
: It includes settings to try "common fixes" (like specific fonts or colors) to show how little they sometimes help in real-world scenarios. Critique
: Some levels feature flickering backgrounds and words that shift vertically between lines, making focus nearly impossible for those without the condition. While its 72% "Mostly Positive" rating on Steam
: Each chapter introduces new rules that mangle the text, such as jittery letters , swapping "p, q, b, and d" , and removing spaces between words.
is an experimental empathy tool designed to help non-dyslexic players understand the daily struggle of reading with dyslexia. Developed by Alastair Low of Lowtek Games , it uses a fantasy narrative to simulate genuine frustration rather than provide a typical relaxing gaming experience. Gameplay & Mechanics The game follows a small fox through a
: The inclusion of a chapter select menu allows you to skip to the end, but the game explicitly notes that doing so provides no satisfaction—simulating how someone might feel when forced to skip content they cannot process.