That Dragon, Cancer Review

The father, son, and the holy spirit.

Spoiler warning: This review discusses plot elements that may be considered spoilers.

There’s a section of That Dragon Cancer where Amy and Ryan Green, the game’s creators and lead characters, have to tell their two older sons exactly what’s happening to their baby brother Joel. The most straightforward answer to that question is one no child--really no parent--should ever have to hear: Joel is diagnosed at a year old with a merciless form of brain cancer, and given less than a year to live. This is not the story Amy and Ryan tell their other children.

The tale they tell is a bedtime story, recorded, and given life in That Dragon, Cancer as a pixelated Ghosts n’ Goblins riff; Joel is a brave knight who shoots enemies with spears. At the start, he's bound to succeed in his quest because of divine grace, the light of God helping him out, eventually forced to do battle with a physical manifestation of the titular dragon, cancer incarnate. The battle stops dead, however, when one of the boys mentions a neighbor who also died of cancer, and asks, in that guileless way only children can, where the neighbor’s grace was when that neighbor died. Amy answers that: sometimes, the grace manifests when the brave knight doesn’t have to fight anymore, and they can rest.

More than it is any sort of game with a victory-state, or a satisfying climax, That Dragon, Cancer is Ryan and Amy’s abstract, dream-world document of the continual search for, if not their own grace, then at least respite for themselves and their lost child. As such, it’s hard, bordering on impossible, to judge as a game in the strictest sense, even under looser Gone Home/The Beginner's Guide terms. It has no need or interest to entertain anyone who plays it. The existential terror and disorientation of the experience has no real satisfaction, just the hope that expressing it can let its creators lift the burden. There are no Achievements, no points to be gained. There is only the ability to weave and work abstractly through the pain of its creators as they did, the interactivity of the medium allowing them the freedom to craft often virtual cathedrals to stand in monument of it.

Ryan and Amy struggle to help their other children understand Joel's plight.
Ryan and Amy struggle to help their other children understand Joel's plight.

Crucially, every emotional breakthrough, every new revelation, every gut-stab of a memory in That Dragon, Cancer must be discovered, confronted, and processed, as it undoubtedly had to be in the minds of its creators as it happened. The only tools you have to do so are the ability to look around, and a single button to interact. A single button lets you hear recorded family memories, the narrated, desperate thoughts of the parents. A single button keeps Ryan from drowning in the seas of his depression, to view the endless “thank you” cards at their hospital, to experience even the sheer mundaniaty of life with a loved-one's lethal illness staring you in the eyes. In That Dragon, Cancer, coping is a gameplay mechanic. The fact that it’s difficult to do so is deliberate and appropriate. Even as rudimentary as many of the obstacles are in That Dragon, Cancer, there are still moments where the game prevents the player from moving on without struggling with the decrepit, Myst-like point-and-click-to-move control scheme. In that regard, it actually has more in common with early horror games of the medium than it does any of the “walking simulators” that have cropped up in recent years.

The miracle isn’t that Joel’s tumor goes away. It’s that, for a brief moment, Joel sleeps. The screaming nightmare is over for a night, with the knowledge that it will return. It is terrifying, and more frighteningly, it happens to millions every day.

Joel was expected to not last the year, and lasted four. It’d be so easy to call his defiance of those odds a miracle, but the game has no compunctions of bursting that bubble before it ever inflates. The scene after we hear Amy talk of grace and miracles to her children is a sequence where Joel can’t stop crying because of the pain in his head, to the point of banging his head against the crib to make it end. You have the ability to walk with him around the hospital room, to try and feed him, to give him juice that he promptly vomits up, with Ryan finally resigning to prayer and, ultimately, complete surrender to the fact the crying won’t end. The miracle isn’t that Joel’s tumor goes away. It’s that, for a brief moment, Joel sleeps. The screaming nightmare is over for a night, with the knowledge that it will return. It is terrifying, and more frighteningly, it happens to millions every day. Imagine there’s a disease that causes that level of agony to very real children. There is no physical means of stopping it, and despite Ryan’s constant pleading to God for deliverance, the Lord neither takes Joel away, nor does he give him peace in any sort of timely manner.

That Dragon, Cancer effectively conveys real, complex emotions.
That Dragon, Cancer effectively conveys real, complex emotions.

God plays a huge role in That Dragon, Cancer. This family is in dire need of a savior that won’t come, and it may very well depend on the player’s own relationship with God how one chooses to interpret the fact that, despite that absence, they remain hopeful. That said, there are moments where that faith is questioned, where the dissonance that comes with having faith in something that doesn’t seem to have much faith in you must be sorted out. While Amy’s faith remains true from beginning to end, Ryan’s faith seems to take the biggest hit during the game, particularly during a sequence with the detritus of his tiny life displayed as an inconsequential dot in the middle of a vast ocean, crawling with malignant, throbbing tumors.

The game never flinches from the evil of cancer, which ultimately makes the moments of happiness, as simple as they are, mean the world. The game is constructed to let players find the beaming light in less grandiose moments: finding time, even after a hard doctor’s visit, to get excited for dinner, roadtripping to California, watching Joel feed ducks at a lake, letting him ramble about how loud lions can roar, or watching his favorite cartoon on a tablet. Surrounded by immeasurable pain, the tiny details have lingered in Ryan and Amy, enough to pockmark the darkness inherent in this game with a simple, untouchable joy.

This family is in dire need of a savior that won’t come, and it may very well depend on the player’s own relationship with God how one chooses to interpret the fact that, despite that absence, they remain hopeful.

That Dragon, Cancer ends on a deliberate image; it’s an image that, at first, feels entirely unearned, schmaltzy and cute in ways that, even at its most playful, the rest of the game isn’t. In narrative terms, we see a written ending, showcasing a faith in something beyond all the death and disease that gives us all what we love most in this world. From the side of its creators, it’s a permanent place where a mother and father have distilled everything wonderful about their child. This is the only place where we truly meet Joel. Not his disease, not his limitations. Just the child they got to know, surrounded by everything he loved.

It’s virtually impossible to not bring one’s own biases into That Dragon, Cancer, because death and disease are universal. Just as it’s impossible to quantify whether the exploration of those two heavy topics is worth the time and considerable emotional energy, it’s impossible to truly quantify the immeasurable value of being able to not just forever present the best version of a person to the world, but being able to earn his presence in every way his parents did.

The Good

  • Powerful meditation on life and death
  • Spirituality presented without taking any one side
  • The language of old video games used to wonderfully imaginative effect

The Bad

  • Clunky controls and glitches sometimes get in your way

About the Author

Justin Clark was able to finish That Dragon Cancer in about two hours. He WAS going to make pancakes for breakfast the next morning. Those plans have changed.
856 Comments  RefreshSorted By 
GameSpot has a zero tolerance policy when it comes to toxic conduct in comments. Any abusive, racist, sexist, threatening, bullying, vulgar, and otherwise objectionable behavior will result in moderation and/or account termination. Please keep your discussion civil.

Avatar image for ahpuck
ahpuck

3636

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 100

User Lists: 0

It's like that old lady crossing the street, oh so slowly, that the light turns green for you but you can't go because she is in the middle of the street. You want to honk at her to hurry up, but you won't because everyone else is going to think you're an %(*%(&. I think I'll just donate $15.00 and not play this game., just not my cup of tea. In a way, it did what it was intended to do.

3 • 
Avatar image for stridsvagnen
stridsvagnen

35

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By stridsvagnen

Pretentious as ****

6 • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

@stridsvagnen: And I suppose that Grand Theft Auto V is less pretentious then, since you like it so much that you would buy it again for the PS4?

2 • 
Avatar image for stridsvagnen
stridsvagnen

35

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@Gelugon_baat: Yes, I do not see Grand Theft Auto V as pretentious, exactly right.

2 • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

@stridsvagnen: So you don't think that raising a wanted level of several stars, then hiding to remove the wanted levels and pursuing a story mission next without any seeming consequence from all that ruckus is pretentious?

2 • 
Avatar image for stridsvagnen
stridsvagnen

35

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@Gelugon_baat:

No, that would be unrealistic, not pretentious.

Pretentious:

1. characterized by assumption of dignity or importance, especially when exaggerated or undeserved.

6 • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

Edited By Gelugon_baat

@stridsvagnen:

Also, Grand Theft Auto V can still be described as pretentious.

For one, the single-player mode has the player pursuing the stories of three characters with different personalities. Yet, the player can also have the characters going on a crazy-ass romp racking up stars; such an act goes against their personalities, except perhaps Trevor's.

The game expects the player to somehow gloss over this in-game contradiction. You can of course argue that this is a compromise made for the sake of "fun", but then, maybe you are the one who is pretentious. If you want that kind of fun, you should be playing Saints Row instead.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for chippiez
Chippiez

574

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 28

User Lists: 5

@Gelugon_baat: Even after the man posted the definition of the word, you misuse it.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

Edited By Gelugon_baat

@chippiez: Describe how I misused it then.

Also, don't think that you have not misused words yourself. I saw your rant about "SJWs" and how you extended the coverage of that label beyond its original definition. You used that label to cover up your "you are with us or against us" stance.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

@stridsvagnen: Well, if you would use that angle of argument, you will have to describe why the assumption of dignity by this game is undeserved. Otherwise, you are just blowing hot air.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for csward
csward

2155

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 20

User Lists: 0

Edited By csward

@Gelugon_baat: GTA 5 is one of the top selling games of 2014 AND 2015? How is it pretentious? It wasn't for me, but I wouldn't use "pretentious" to describe it at all.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

Edited By Gelugon_baat

@csward: So you cite its commercial success as a counter-argument.

How do you relate its sales performance to the game's presentation and gameplay, really?

Also, are you aware that there are many other factors which contribute to that game's sales performance, other than its game designs? Hype for a long-running line of product, for one?

Upvote • 
Avatar image for stridsvagnen
stridsvagnen

35

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By stridsvagnen

@Gelugon_baat: Yea, you win ^^ I don't have the necessary english linguistic skills to argue. It was more of a gut thing. Indie games with a supposedly moving story, abstract/nontraditional game design/art, the dialogue with subtitles, characters have no faces - It's just a predjudicial observation if you will.

Let's just agree to disagree ^^

3 • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

@stridsvagnen: Well, thank you for admitting your "prejudicial observation" then. :\

Upvote • 
Avatar image for chippiez
Chippiez

574

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 28

User Lists: 5

@Gelugon_baat: Will you admit yours?

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

Edited By Gelugon_baat

@chippiez: Point it out then, so that I know which you are referring to.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for stridsvagnen
stridsvagnen

35

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@Gelugon_baat: Yea, that's probably not a real thing but I guess you know what i mean. Did not believe I would get the kind of response I got from my first comment ^^

3 • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

@stridsvagnen: Let me guess - you were expecting praises of the game or some other indie hippie bullshit rant, did you?

Upvote • 
Avatar image for stridsvagnen
stridsvagnen

35

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@Gelugon_baat: No I didn't expect a response at all :P

Upvote • 
Avatar image for cojuelodevil
cojuelodevil

233

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By cojuelodevil

I want to play this game but as father just make me sad only thinking about all the suffering and impotence they felt.

I hope they can port this game to VR to make it more personal and raise more cancer awareness.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Baconstrip78
Baconstrip78

1856

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@cojuelodevil: Who isn't aware of cancer? Nearly every person on the planet has had someone they loved die of cancer.

5 • 
Avatar image for cojuelodevil
cojuelodevil

233

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@Baconstrip78: yes people a aware and I bet you are but the awareness is for donating money and I have, have you?

Upvote • 
Avatar image for chippiez
Chippiez

574

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 28

User Lists: 5

@cojuelodevil: Who isn't aware you can donate money to cancer charities? The problem isn't awareness. The problem is innefective management and stewardship of resources at most charities turns off a lot of people. Why should the CEO of a charity get 500,000 a year just because his for-profit counterpart would? Meanwhile a bunch of average, every-day people volunteer their time for free, but the goddamned CEO.. He's important and critical... and must be compensated by a board of others who are also "fairly compensated for their time involvement and expertise".

Meanwhile the nurse coming in on her off day to work with the kids without seeking or receiving a paycheck. If the money went to provide THOSE people the resources and tools they need to continue doing good, more people would give more to charities.

St. Judes is alright. I give them 50$ a month and have for the past 8 years. I don't agree with all of their practices and spending of money, but they get it *mostly right*. That's why so many people *DO* donate to them. But a lot of supposed "charities" spend 30% of inbound money on executive/mgmt compensation, another 30% on increasing the money coming in, another 30% on feelies for the donors to make them feel good about their donation and the remaining 10% actually helping the cause. You have to be very judicious with who you give your money to if you actually want to affect positive change.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for shanethewolf
shanethewolf

332

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 29

User Lists: 0

@cojuelodevil: I know you mean well, but those donations go to the wrong places and any advanced drugs available to treat cancer are rarely available to the people like you and me who make those donations.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for cojuelodevil
cojuelodevil

233

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@shanethewolf: in my case I donate to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital you need to trust someone, no kid have to suffer such a horrible disease.

2 • 
Avatar image for shanethewolf
shanethewolf

332

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 29

User Lists: 0

@cojuelodevil: I agree with you completely and I prefer to donate to hospitals and hospices as I believe they will use the money directly rather than on "administration". If I get chance to make a sizeable donation one day I will request receipts and I think this should be standard practice for any charity.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

@shanethewolf: @cojuelodevil:

You might want to check whether they are audited too.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for mooseking
MooseKing

9

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By MooseKing

@Gelugon_baat

I actually was compelled to make a new account on Gamespot due to this review and the recent swath of games that are at most a gracious 7 popping up as "Superb" and "Masterpiece" that don't warrant the rating. Gold star for you!

If I were to be "douchey" I'd ask you why you have to comment on every other comment in this thread? It makes you look like an attention whore when you give your 2 cents on everyones opinion. That my friend is douchey.

3 • 
Avatar image for chippiez
Chippiez

574

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 28

User Lists: 5

@mooseking: SJWs are douchey.

3 • 
Avatar image for mooseking
MooseKing

9

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@chippiez:

You nailed it.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

Edited By Gelugon_baat

For anyone else that would be reading this, I will just requote what MooseKing has said here earlier, since it's already buried under the other comments:

"Gamespot and IGN will give an empty plastic bag a 9 rating."

That should give context to my earlier suggestion that MooseKing is an unpleasant person.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

Edited By Gelugon_baat

@mooseking:

Well, to answer you, I am trying to inveigle those people into revealing their double standards, hypocrisy or their own biased slant.

Also, I will tell you this: anyone that I responded to in the manner that I had, e.g. to you, is more often than not, an unpleasant person.

Also, I would like to know what you consider to be "superb" or a "masterpiece", since you have so eagerly pronounced your own opinions on those other games that you believe should be a "7".

2 • 
Avatar image for mooseking
MooseKing

9

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Allow me to quote you also so I can vaguely categorize your qualities and make assumptions of your character on an internet forum.

"Well, to answer you, I am trying to inveigle those people into revealing their double standards, hypocrisy or their own biased slant."

So attempting to elicit a response from me to reveal my double standards isn't an unpleasant character trait? Based off an entirely light hearted comment?

Not only are you pretentious, remember we're throwing out assumptions and generalizations today, you also have entered troll territory.

In all seriousness I appreciate our interaction as it's burned up a little time at work and has created a few smiles, so thank you.

Good day to you sir.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

Edited By Gelugon_baat

@mooseking: You are yet one more person who make use of the word "pretentious" in vain.

Also, "light-hearted"? Really? If you are going to say that, then I can say that my remarks were "light-hearted" too. After all, they "created a few smiles", didn't they?

Furthermore, here's the thing: I have never said that I am not an unpleasant person.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for chippiez
Chippiez

574

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 28

User Lists: 5

@Gelugon_baat: You don't have to make an explicite declaration for something to be implicitely stated.

2 • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

@chippiez: I know that. :\

Upvote • 
Avatar image for ninjaxams
ninjaxams

7500

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 5

User Lists: 0

i won't play this game. as a father of two i don't think i'm up for it on an emotional level. that said however i feel i should do my part and purchase this game since they are donating to charity. to all you assholes downing this title **** you, go rot. i hope like hell you never have to know the pains these two folks went through with their son.

3 •