SERIES
Single-Verb Design
Adding verbs makes games more complex. But cling to a single verb and the combinatorial space unexpectedly opens up. From 1982 Sokoban to today's A Monster's Expedition, we trace the northern extreme of verb minimalism.
Related Essays
- Sokoban (1982) — The 44-Year-Old Prototype of Meta-Puzzles
In 1982, Hiroyuki Imabayashi of Thinking Rabbit released Sokoban. Forty-four years later, walk-and-push is still the bedrock of Baba Is You and Patrick's Parabox. Reading the lineage backward from period context.
- When Fewer Verbs Make a Richer Game — The Lineage of Subtractive Design
Sokoban, Snakebird, Stephen's Sausage Roll, A Monster's Expedition, Bonfire Peaks. A maker's-eye survey of subtractive design, the lineage that deepens difficulty without adding verbs, built around one question: why does less become more?

