Free Game for Simulation Fans
Sort the Court is a free-to-play simulator where you take on the role of a king. In this 2D animated game from Graebor, your wisdom is put to the test as you make decisions that will affect the course of your kingdom. Every choice could help make your constituents happy or could cause them to hate you.
In terms of its graphics, Sort the Court is reminiscent of old Flash games like Castle Crashers or Friday Night Funkin. However, this king simulator skips fancy animation and sticks to a single location, same background, and focuses on a consistent gameplay experience.
Another day in the court
Graphics-wise, Sort the Court sports a simplistic 2D animation style reminiscent of Flash games from the early 2000s. As it focuses on giving you the experience of a king, seated in his court and listening to his subjects and attendees. Even the movement is limited, the devs spend no effort in making characters walk. They look like stiff cutouts making their way. Still, it’s worth noting that the background color changes to reflect the time cycle, from morning, midday, to evening.
Despite its rather simple graphics, the game is surprisingly addictive. Each decision you make can affect any of the three resources: population, happiness, and wealth. While the early choices are straightforward–such as a demon increasing your wealth in exchange for some of your constituents–your late-game choices require more consideration. This makes it both challenging and exciting, as your answers could lead to fewer people, less wealth, or less happiness for the kingdom.
You also have a butler and an advisor to help you, which completes the feel of being a king in court. In terms of controls, you can use the mouse only to interact with the audio controls. The rest of the keys needed are spacebar and Y (yes) and N (no). Each choice is followed with a brightly colored thumbs up in green and thumbs down in red to show your response. This makes the gameplay boring but captures the tediousness of the court.
Still an addictive game
Its use of upbeat background music helps keep off some of the boredom from the repetitive elements of the game. Although repeating, the sound doesn’t feel like the rest of the game and instead helps keep it interesting, adding excitement to a premise that revolves around something boring. Speaking of repetition, some characters return for two reasons. First is the progress of something they raised to you earlier and the second is to make the same offer.
While some characters repeat their offer, not all is a textbook redo. Aside from the large cast of characters available, some of them offer randomized events. For example, a wizard visits you and offers to show you some magic. This may turn out to be a plague that will harm your city or a spell of great fortune rewarding you vast amounts of wealth. This random element keeps you from quitting the game early.
Creating excitement from boredom
Sort the Court turns an otherwise boring premise into an interesting game experience. It doesn’t rely on fancy visuals and instead uses a plain 2D animation similar to the games from a decade ago. However, it features a wide range of characters asking for your wisdom, with your choices leading to unexpected gifts or ruin down the line. This unpredictability makes the game more addictive as you start to carefully consider each of your choices.