Indivisible is like a delicious smoothie made from RPG and platforming fruits, blended with some Southeast Asian mythology and served with a straw made from nostalgia. That's right, folks! Get ready for a frustrated joyride as you try to figure out how to control Ajna, the protagonist with a questionable understanding of personal boundaries. Spoiler alert: she has a knack for absorbing people into her mind and making them do her bidding. That's a healthy friendship you have there, Ajna.
The real fun starts when you get to explore, jump, and apparently beat the snot out of everything. Ajna, your protagonist, runs around the landscape like a toddler on a sugar high, learning new moves along the way. Every enemy encounter opens up a whole new level of confusion and chaotic button pressing. Combat is like a dance party where you control various party members, each assigned a button. Want to execute an ultra combo? Just mash those buttons like you're trying to play the world's hardest piano piece. Don't worry about complex systems; the game simplifies decision-making into frantic button mashing and slight panic. You could almost break a sweat during a boss fight, and trust me, that's impressive for a game where the most intense physical activity is likely just yelling at the Switch.
Visually, Indivisible hits all the right notes. The hand-drawn art is stunning, resembling those California hippie murals but more polished and less likely to make your parents question your life choices. The animations flow beautifully, almost making you forget you just flopped around like a fish during combat. With colors so vibrant, it's like they took a thousand rainbows and crammed them into the game. It's a visual taco truck, serving up aesthetic goodness with a side of you-noticing-small-details.
Indivisible is a beautiful, chaotic blend of RPG and platforming, leaving you wondering if you're meant to feel excited or slightly confused. It's an entertaining ride if you're up for a challenge and don't mind a protagonist who has some rather strange interpersonal practices. Just keep in mind: no one is safe from Ajna's 'friendship' abilities. Overall, if you're looking for a vivid game that lets you dive into a mash-up of cultures while getting your fingers' cardio workout through frantic button mashing, grab Indivisible. But be warned, your friends might be moving in... into your mind.