The Bunny Graveyard
System requirements for The Bunny Graveyard
Intel HD 4000 / TBA
Intel Core i3-8100 @ 3.60GHz / TBA
4 GB / TBA
2 GB
Not required
About The Bunny Graveyard
The Bunny Graveyard sets up a premise that sounds like several different games at once: a cursor — yes, the one you usually drag around a desktop — has been pulled into a digital world inspired by GBA and DS-era pixel art, with gardening minigames, fishing, underground fight tournaments and a peaceful little garden run by a bunny named Skye. The cursor's official job is to find Skye and get her out. The world has other ideas.
A strange entity lives somewhere inside the computer and doesn't want the cursor to leave. The horror is layered underneath the cute exterior rather than thrown in the player's face — the pixel art is bright, the minigames are genuinely fun, and the slow accumulation of wrongness is what builds the dread. Some characters become friends you'd happily revisit. Some become the worst nightmares you've ever had in pixel form.
The gameplay variety is the surprise. Fishing minigames, garden tending, underground championship fights and exploration of multiple distinct areas all share the same world. Player choices shape interactions with the characters, and the path to the truth runs through both completion of the small games and decisions made in the larger story.
Collectibles and figurines hide throughout for players who want to dig deeper. Animated cutscenes — sometimes action-packed, sometimes creepy — break up the moment-to-moment loop. This is described as a first chapter, which is the game letting you know it's an opening act rather than a complete season. What's here is short, dense, weirder than the cute exterior suggests, and worth finishing twice if you want to catch what you missed on the first run.

