Sky - Hazel

The literal geography of the game—the desolate Earth versus the shimmering city in the clouds—acts as a stark metaphor for . To be an "Engineer" is to be worthy of the sky; to be anything else is to be dirt.

In the rusted, sun-bleached ruins of Gideon, isn't just a story about flying; it’s a meditation on the crushing weight of legacy and the quiet violence of expectations. The Crucible of the Trial Hazel Sky

Hazel Sky asks a painful question: What do we lose of ourselves when we climb the ladder someone else built for us? By the time Shane builds his wings, the player is left wondering if the sky is actually worth the cost of the journey. The literal geography of the game—the desolate Earth

It is a short, bittersweet symphony about the moment you realize that your "destiny" might actually be a cage, and that true freedom might mean falling instead of flying. The Crucible of the Trial Hazel Sky asks