The Pilgrimage [v2.10] [messman] __full__ May 2026
For fans of Dear Esther who thought it was too optimistic. For players who spend twenty minutes in character creators. For anyone who has ever felt that the act of choosing a path is more exhausting than walking it.
Messman’s audio work in v2.10 deserves specific praise. The signature "Spire Hum"—a low, sub-bass frequency that vibrates your controller—has been modified. It now phases in and out of tune with your own heartbeat if you play with a pulse sensor (or the PS5’s haptic feedback). When you are progressing "correctly," the hum is a perfect fifth above your resting BPM. When you doubt, it becomes a diminished chord.
The Cartography of Regret: Deconstructing the Emotional Labyrinth of The Pilgrimage (v2.10) the pilgrimage [v2.10] [messman]
Just don’t play it on a Sunday evening. You will not sleep.
F.R. Vales, Independent Interactive Fiction Critic For fans of Dear Esther who thought it was too optimistic
The Pilgrimage v2.10 is not a game. It is a diagnostic tool. Messman has crafted an interactive mirror that punishes certainty and mocks hesitation in equal measure. It asks: What is the difference between a journey and a trap? And then it refuses to answer.
With each update, Messman proves they are less interested in telling you a story than in forcing you to excavate one from your own subconscious. The Pilgrimage (v2.10) is no exception. On its surface, it is a minimalist walking sim: you are a nameless devotee traversing the "Ashen Scablands" toward a distant, silent Spire. Below that surface, however, lies the most intricate behavioral save-scumming detector I have ever encountered. Version 2.10 does not add new areas; it adds new ways to remember. Messman’s audio work in v2
In v2.09, reaching the Spire gave you a static screen and the text: "You arrive. Nothing is there. This was the point."