

To give too much away about the bunker will spoil a great part of what makes Paradise Lost so enticing. But this isn’t your typical war bunker this is a whole underground city, designed to house future generations that will put the world back on its feet – under a Nazi regime, of course. Szymon’s journey takes him to an abandoned Nazi bunker, which is where you’ll spend most of your time with Paradise Lost. He simply presses on, determined to find out anything he can about the man in the picture. But he’s a strong protagonist despite seeing some horrifying sights upon his journey, he never lets anything faze him. But now all alone, he quickly has to come to terms with everything. He’s a teenage boy, clearly sheltered from the atrocities of the world by his mother. It’s difficult not to be immediately connected to Szymon. But he can’t sit around to perish like his mother armed with only a photo of a man he believes to be his father, he sets out to try and find something – anything – that might help him survive. When his mother succumbs to an illness, Szymon’s all alone in the world. Many civilians were killed others taken to underground bunkers only to die later. Following a 20-year long Second World War, life as we know it ceased to exist.

You take on the role of Szymon, a boy raised alone by his mother in a ruined wasteland.

Set in a post-apocalyptic alternative world, Paradise Lost isn’t very long but it’ll have its hooks in you from start to finish.
