Submissions by Alex Cai tagged first-person

This is a single player game on the PC to be played in first-person. Your crazy father just took away a large amount of money from you and locked it in his safe. Your goal is to explore the environment in a broken family and look for clues and ways to open the safe so you can buy a new home and get out of there. You can drive to seek help but your psycho dad will not net you move out unless he thinks you're "man" enough. If your dad finds out and gets too angry about what you're doing, he will destroy and break your belongings and do other things that may get in your way like taking away your car keys to limit you form seeking help from the outside. You will also need to keep a sane meter for your character from depleting to zero. Things that keep the sane meter up include gaming, visiting your girlfriend and other family members. but the sane meter will go down every time your psycho dad destroys your belongings or takes something away from you.

Image used:

https://i.ytimg.com/vi/MI9S2Uo2b6c/maxresdefault.jpg



You play as Aleandro, a smart kid in a programming class. The pace of this programming class is so fast that pretty much the rest of the class have problems understanding everything in time for tests and summitives. Only you have the sufficient knowledge to work comfortable in this course. In this game, you play first person perspective and you will need to try to help your fellow classmates and friends when they are struggling with their work. You'll need to pay attention to people that sit around you and helping different people can get you different rewards. eg, If you help the Chinese kid sitting in the front right of you, you will get introduced to amazing Chinese food that you never knew about and he can back you up in any physical conflict.
You will need to pay attention to the bars on top of your friends and classmates to see how they're doing. The more depleted the bars are, the more you will need to help the person. You can help them by looking at their screen and trying programming solutions on their computers and you may also choose to crack a few puns here and there to help them with stress relief. If the bar on top of the person depletes, then he or she is so stressed that he/she won't have the motivation anymore to come back to the course. If all your classmates drop out, then it's game over. As you play through more levels (weeks into the course), bars deplete quicker due to the increasing amount of work required.

Image used:

http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2011/05/28/1226064/627033-people-on-computers.jpg