To The Moon Wiki
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To the Moon is a single-player role-playing game developed and published by Freebird Games. It was published on Steam for Microsoft Windows only on November 1, 2011[1]. It has been nominated for many awards, and was voted the best indie RPG of 2011. To the Moon is Episode 1 in the Sigmund Corp. series. A free, 1 hour trial was released on presumably November 2011[2]. A Mac version was released on January 7, 2014[3]. Ports for iOS and Android were released on May 2017 by X.D. Network.[4] A version for the Nintendo Switch was released on January 16, 2020[5].

Plot[]

Sigmund Corporation uses a technology that can create artificial memories. They offer this as a "wish fulfillment" service to people on their death beds. Since these artificial memories conflict with the patient's real memories, the procedure is only legal to do on people without much time left to live.

Sigmund Corp. employees Dr. Eva Rosalene and Dr. Neil Watts are tasked with fulfilling the lifelong dream of the dying Johnny Wyles. Johnny wants to go to the moon, although he doesn't know why. The doctors insert themselves into an interactive compilation of his memories and traverse backwards through his life via mementos. With each leap to an important moment in Johnny's memories, they learn more about him and what brought him to his current position in life, including his largely unhappy marriage to his childhood sweetheart, River. Upon reaching his childhood, the doctors attempt to insert his desire to go to the moon. Supposedly, Johnny's mind would create new memories based on that desire, and Johnny would die believing he lived without any regrets.

However, Johnny's mind does not create the new memories as planned. Dr. Watts and Dr. Rosalene must solve the problem to fulfill Johnny's dying wish of going to the moon.

Ending[]

Eventually, it is revealed that Johnny and River met as children at a carnival. They looked at the night sky and made up a constellation: a rabbit with the moon as its belly. The two agreed to meet at the same place the following year, with Johnny promising that should he forget or get lost, the two would "regroup on the moon". That night, Johnny gives River a toy platypus which River treasures for the rest of her life. Shortly after, Johnny's twin brother Joey was killed in an accident. Johnny was given Beta Blockers to induce memory loss of the tragic event, also causing him to forget his first encounter with River. He later happened to meet her again, and eventually marry her, and River only realized later on that he had forgot their meeting at the carnival (Johnny confessed that he approached her in school because she was different, and revealed that he thought that was their first meeting). River, who was diagnosed with autism as an adult, did not tell Johnny directly about their first meeting; instead, she tried to indirectly jostle his memories by cutting her hair and crafting paper bunnies, including a dual-colored one representing the constellation they made up during their first encounter, combined with the blue-and-yellow dress she wore on their wedding. River was unable to make Johnny remember before she died, and Johnny was left with lingering guilt and an inexplicable desire to go to the moon.

In the present, Rosalene and Watts eventually implant a memory sequence in which Joey did not die, and lived on to become a popular author, and Johnny did not meet River again until they started working together at NASA. As the comatose real-life Johnny begins to die, he imagines going on a moon mission with River. During the launch, River holds out a hand to him. The moon appears through a window on the ship, and Johnny takes her hand as his heart monitor flatlines.

In the epilogue, Johnny and River eventually get married, and build and retire to the same house where the real-life Johnny and River lived. Back in the real world, Rosalene and Watts look to Johnny's grave, which is placed adjacent to River’s. They reveal to the audience that Johnny willed the house to his caregiver, Lily. Rosalene receives a phone call, and the two move on to their next patient. While Watts is leaving, he stops and the screen briefly flashes red, the same way it did when Johnny felt pain. Watts takes some painkillers, then continues onward.


Gameplay[]

To the Moon is built on the RPG Maker XP engine, which is used to create 16-bit 2D role-playing games, in the style of Dragon Quest or Final Fantasy. However, unlike a typical RPG, To the Moon has virtually no battle system, inventory system or party system. The game's focus, being a more story-driven game, is around exploration, puzzle solving, interpreting information from Johnny's life, and finding ways to get deeper into his memories.

The gameplay primarily consists of exploring Johnny's memories to find significant objects and collect energy from them to strengthen the memory and connect to a more distant one, from Johnny's old age leading back to his childhood. Occasionally, the player will have to explore Johnny's house and the surrounding area for certain clues, if they cannot gather enough energy from a certain memory, or don't know how to proceed to a further one.

Once the items are all gathered and the player has seen all the memories, they can connect certain objects that exist across two different memories to move freely between them. At this point, the player can begin manipulating the memories, by changing around characters, objects and events, to make Johnny believe he had achieved his dream of going to the moon.

Development and release[]

To the Moon had it's first trailer released on August 6, 2011[6]

Translations[]

Fan-made language translations are also available for the game — supported languages are: Chinese, German, Italian, Spanish, French, Polish, Russian, Brazilian Portuguese, Vietnamese, Dutch, and Turkish.

Minisodes[]

A downloadable minisode was released on December 31, 2013, both as a standalone download and as part of the Steam and GOG.com releases. This episode centers on Dr. Rosalene and Dr. Watts and features a holiday party at their local Sigmund Corp. office. A second minisode was released on February 18, 2015.

Soundtrack[]

The soundtrack of To the Moon was praised by many critics. It features a theme song by Laura Shigihara ("Everything's Alright"), with the rest being composed by Kan Gao. The soundtrack was released on November 4, 2011 on Bandcamp, and as of the latter quarter of 2014 is now available via Steam as downloadable content. The soundtrack includes 31 tracks at a total length of 53:05 minutes. The soundtrack can also be found on YouTube, certain songs having over one million views.

Reception[]

To the Moon has received positive reviews which praised the story and music. The game holds an average rating of 81 out of 100 on Metacritic, and 81.53% on GameRankings.

In GameSpot's 2011 Game of the Year awards, To the Moon was given the "Best Story" award, which was won against Catherine, Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective, Portal 2, and Xenoblade Chronicles.

System Requirements[]

Windows[]

  • Processor: Intel Pentium III 800 MHz
  • Memory:512 MB RAM
  • Graphics:1024x768 High Color +
  • DirectX®:9.0
  • Hard Drive:100 MB HD space

Mac OS X[]

  • OS: OS X 10.6.8
  • Graphics: OpenGL 2.0 capable graphics card
  • Hard Drive: 500 MB available space

Steam OS and Linux[]

  • OS: Major Linux Distribution from 2010
  • Graphics: OpenGL 2.0 capable graphics card
  • Hard Drive: 500 MB available space

Videos[]

References[]

External Links[]

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