Cosy and punk don’t really go together. Cosy is restrained, all nice and warm and snug. Whereas punk is noisy and destructive – angry tunes with aggressive attitudes and anti-establishment ideals. A cosy video game wants to tuck you up nice and tight with a warm drink and tell you everything’s going to be okay, but punk games tear that blanket off, pour your drink down the drain, and drag you to a window to look at the darker parts of the world, or what the world might become. Punk wants to make you feel uncomfortable. So when developer Patattie Games calls Wax Heads ‘cosy-punk’, you might raise an eyebrow.
Take one look at it, though, and you’ll see its ‘punk’ side isn’t leaning into the moodier, political meaning of the word. With its comic-book art style and vinyl record shop setting, Wax Heads only takes the stylings and sounds of ‘punk’, but it definitely fulfils its ‘cosy’ promise with its retail-sim-themed puzzles.
After a brief introduction chronicles how the mega-popular Becoming Violet band started and broke up in the 1980s, you start Wax Head’s Steam Next Fest demo as a new, nameless employee decades later at Repeater Records, a struggling record shop. It’s owned by Morgan, the old leading lady of Becoming Violet, and she explains your job as the new hire is to listen to the customers’ (often confusing) descriptions of what record they want to buy, before then searching the shop for it. Pick a good suggestion and you get more points, but offer a really bad one and you can lose points. It’s not clear what the points are for in the demo, but it seems likely that they might affect the fate of the record shop in the full release.