// ENGADGET — MOBILE & WEB
Engadget Indie Pitch: I'M YOUR HOST
There are so many amazing and important games coming out from smaller studios all the time, and the Engadget Indie Pitch is here to highlight ones that you simply must see.
We've been around long enough to remember the days when Steam was curated by hand, with 20 or so titles added to the storefront in any given month. Today, roughly 2,000 games go live every month on Steam, and that's not counting all of the console, mobile and VR titles we have to consider. A vast majority of these games come from smaller teams, solo creators, artist collectives and independent studios who don't have immediate access to shiny showcases or marketing teams — which brings us to the Indie Pitch. We can't cover every excellent new game here, but we can offer a curated slice of indie pie every now and then.
The Engadget Indie Pitch features a Q&A with the developer of an in-production or recently released game that's caught our eye. Today, it's a chat with Calligram Studio co-founder Jigmé Özer, who's working on the audio deduction game I'M YOUR HOST after the success of Phoenix Springs.
Our game is called I'M YOUR HOST. It's an audio deduction game where you use a custom OS to restore a series of lost podcast episodes.
Three of us at Calligram Studio. Eleanor Summers is the artist, Alexander Smith is the sound designer and composer, and I, Jigmé Özer, do the rest.
About two years. We started pretty much after Phoenix Springs was released in late 2024; it was our first game and it was in development for seven years. The idea with this one was to have a short, manageable scope. Fingers crossed it'll be ready in a handful of months.
What's the origin story of I'M YOUR HOST? Share what inspired you.
I've done a lot of video and audio editing in the past, and I've always been fascinated by the bits that don't make it into the final cut. The dailies, or BTS footage, the bad takes. All the stuff left on the cutting room floor. It's like a liminal space between the worlds of reality and fiction. The idea with I'M YOUR HOST is to give players a straightforward linear narrative through the structure of the podcast episodes, but also to let them sense a parallel story emerge via discarded interviews, field recordings, and other audio clips.
Editing is essentially manipulation. It's a big theme of the story, which revolves around paranoia and technological coercion.
Talk about the importance of audio, and particularly narration, when it comes to designing an immersive and methodical mystery.