-v0.29- By Bald Games | Back To Freedom

A gruff voice cuts through. “You’re awake. Good. You owe me a new air filter.”

He’s in , a decommissioned prison station orbiting a dying gas giant. Once a maximum-security vault, now it's a lawless bazaar of broken criminals, desperate refugees, and corporate mercenaries who missed their last paycheck. Back to Freedom -v0.29- By Bald Games

Since Bald Games often creates branching, choice-driven narratives (typically adult-oriented visual novels with themes of redemption, survival, and complex relationships), this draft focuses on a protagonist escaping a fractured past and navigating a volatile new world. By: Bald Games Logline: After being double-crossed and left for dead, a former smuggler wakes up in a failing orbital prison colony. With version 0.29 of his neural interface glitching through his memories, he must unite a crew of outcasts, earn his freedom, and decide who he truly is before the colony’s collapse buries them all. Prologue: The Glitch The first thing Caelen sees is the flicker. A buzzing, yellow "v0.29" overlaid on his vision—the last stable backup of his personality matrix before his memory was wiped. The real world is worse: a cold steel slab, the stench of recycled air, and the hum of a failing gravitational stabilizer. A gruff voice cuts through

“You want the override?” Zeph laughs, teeth yellow. “Voss owns it. And Voss owns half the guards. But I can get you a meeting… for a price.” You owe me a new air filter

Caelen doesn’t remember the heist. He doesn’t remember the betrayal. But his neural link—an outlawed "Ghost Drive"—keeps feeding him flashes: a woman’s laugh, a gunshot, the name .

The price? Sabotage a rival dealer’s oxygen supply—condemning a dozen innocents to slow suffocation. This is where the Bald Games signature branching intensifies. The screen splits into choices:

Friends of Alabama Heritage logo
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.