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Will: Follow the Light

Introduction

Few games ask you to feel genuinely lost at sea. Will: Follow the Light drops you into a harsh, frozen world somewhere in the northern latitudes, where sailing realistic waters and mushing through blizzards are the only paths back to the people you love. This first-person adventure blends atmospheric exploration with puzzle-solving and survival-adjacent navigation, and it's been out on PC and consoles since May 7, 2026.

Will: Follow the Light Gallery 1
Will: Follow the Light Gallery 2

Overview

Will: Follow the Light is a single-player, first-person adventure from TomorrowHead Studio set against the unforgiving backdrop of the far north. The game follows a lone sailor searching for a way home through endless icy waters and snow-buried terrain, with light serving as both a literal navigational tool and a thematic anchor throughout the journey. The tone sits somewhere between meditative exploration and emotional survival story, with the environment doing most of the heavy lifting.

TomorrowHead Studio built the game around a realistic visual style designed to make the cold feel physical. Every gust of wind and patch of frost is rendered with enough detail that the setting stops feeling like a backdrop and starts feeling like an obstacle. The narrative threads through environmental storytelling and puzzle-solving rather than cutscenes or dialogue dumps, letting the world communicate its story at the player's pace.

The game carries an ESRB Everyone rating with mild fantasy violence noted, and it holds a 4.31 out of 5 rating from 64 reviews on the PlayStation Store, which is a decent early signal for a small indie studio's first major release. It's available on PS5, Xbox, Windows, Steam, and Epic Games Store at $24.99.

What does the sailing actually feel like?

The sailing system in Will: Follow the Light is the mechanic most likely to surprise players. Navigation uses real longitude and latitude coordinates, and TomorrowHead Studio consulted with actual voyagers to shape the yacht simulation. That sounds like it could tip into tedious realism, but the design intent is to keep it immersive without demanding a maritime degree.

Key mechanics built around the sailing system include:

  • Realistic yacht management controls
  • Longitude and latitude coordinate navigation
  • Icy fjord and open sea traversal
  • Weather systems that actively fight back
  • Dog sled sections through snow-covered trails

The dog sled sequences break up the open water sections and bring a different kind of tension. Steering through blizzards with a sled team captures a rawer, more physical sense of northern travel than the boat sections, and the contrast between the two movement systems keeps the pacing from going flat.

Puzzles, memories, and the line between them

The puzzle design in Will: Follow the Light ties directly to its narrative. Solving environmental puzzles unlocks fragments of the past, piecing together who the player character is and what they're sailing toward. The game frames this through a blurred boundary between reality and dream, which gives the puzzle sequences a disorienting quality that fits the isolation of the setting.

This structure means progress is never purely mechanical. Every puzzle solved is also a story beat, which keeps the exploration loop feeling purposeful rather than like filler between sailing segments.

World and setting

The northern setting does the work that most indie games leave to writing. Rugged fjords, open grey water, frozen trails, and the faint pull of distant light create a world that communicates loneliness without saying a word. Light functions as a waypoint system but also as an emotional metaphor, the thing the protagonist is chasing and the thing keeping them sane.

The DualSense controller's vibration support on PS5 adds another layer to the immersion, translating the texture of waves and wind into something tactile. It's a small detail, but in a game built around making you feel the cold, it counts.

Conclusion

Will: Follow the Light is a first-person adventure game that earns its atmosphere through specific, considered design choices: a sailing system grounded in real navigation, dog sled sequences that contrast with the open water, and a puzzle structure that doubles as environmental storytelling. For players who want an exploration game with genuine weight and a setting that actually bites back, TomorrowHead Studio's debut is worth the $24.99 ask across PS5, Xbox, PC, Steam, and Epic Games Store.

About Will: Follow the Light

Studio

TomorrowHead Studio

Website

will.game

Release Date

May 7th 2026

Will: Follow the Light

A first-person adventure game where you sail icy northern waters and lead dog sleds through blizzards to find your way home.

Developer

TomorrowHead Studio

Status

In Development

Release Date

May 7th 2026

Platform