Set off on a mystical journey to the Canadian Far North with Inua: A Story in Ice and Time, a narrative adventure spanning multiple eras.
Meet Taïna, a present-day reporter determined to uncover the truth behind the disappearance of the Terror, one of the ship of the Franklin expedition that aimed to explore the Arctic in the 19th century. Her fate is mysteriously intertwined with Peter, a young filmmaker covering a military expedition in the 1950s, and Simon, a sailor from the Franklin expedition struggling to keep his crew alive.
Navigate through time to discover what links them together. Search for ideas, plant them in the characters minds, and guide them toward Nanurluk, the mythical polar bear that lived 10,000 years ago.
A Mystical Time Travel Experience
Embark on an adventure in the far North of Canada, navigate through the ages, and interact with the past to change the present. In Inua, you’ll need to unravel space-time to solve mysteries and guide the characters on their journey. Move from scene to scene, era to era, and uncover events of the past, unearthing new ideas that influence the characters minds. Help Simon, Peter, and Taïna overcome the obstacles standing in their way, and change the course of history itself.
A Historical Saga
Inua’s original and supernatural storyline is rooted in a real-life saga: the Franklin expedition, a British Arctic exploration mission in the 19th century that met with shipwreck, disease, and mutiny. The fate of this expedition remains largely mysterious. Gather clues and discover its history!
Inua - A Story in Ice and Time:
- Manipulate 3D dioramas and interact intuitively through “gaze and pinch” to uncover the mysteries of time and space.
- A fantasy tale based on extraordinary historical events.
- An incredible narrative inspired by Inuit legends and folklore, developed with support from Inuit writer Thomassie Mangiok, and advisors Billy Gauthier and Monica Ittusardjuat.
- Created by the team behind Bury Me, My Love and Vignettes, adapted from the original story by Nathalie Frassoni and Frédéric Bouvier, featuring stunning artistic direction by Delphine Fourneau from the Klondike collective.