



When BK falls into one of his own holes, he’s confronted by his best friend Mira and the residents of Donut County, who are all stuck 999 feet underground… and they demand answers! You play as BK, a hole-driving raccoon who swallows up his friends and their homes to earn idiotic prizes. Raccoons have taken over Donut County with remote-controlled trash-stealing holes.

Meet cute characters, steal their trash, and throw them in a hole. Regardless of whether camp you fall in, it’s fun enough that it won’t disappoint.Īnnapurna Interactive provided us with a Donut County Switch code for review purposes.Donut County is a story-based physics puzzle game where you play as an ever-growing hole in the ground. I don’t know whether one of those will come, but even if it does, I’m still glad that Donut County’s release on new platforms means that I - and, I hope, many other people - will get to chance to either experience it again, or experience it for the first time. It feels like so much more could have been done with this premise, so once you’re finished the game, you’ll be left wanting more.īut if my biggest complaint about a game is that I desperately want a sequel, that should be a sign that it’s doing something right. Mind you, because it doesn’t add anything new, my biggest complaint about the game still stands. There may not be anything new here, but what there is stands up well enough on it own that there doesn’t need to be. The characters are all delightful, the script is funny and well-written, and the game play - which consists almost entirely of sucking the titular county down a hole, and occasionally launching things back up in the air - never gets old. After all, Donut County is a pretty short game, which means that I didn’t have a chance to get sick of it when I played it on PS4. This really shouldn’t come as a surprise. Why? Simple: because I had so much fun playing it the first time around on PS4, I wanted to confirm that the fun translated to other systems. But when Donut County came out on the Switch, I jumped at the chance to play it again. For the most part, once I’m done with them, that’s it for me - regardless of whether or not I liked it, I’m on to the next game in my ever-expanding backlog.
