Hazelight Studios have outdone themselves with Split Fiction, upping the ante from their success with It Takes Two. The game’s premise involves two down-on-their-luck writers, Mio and Zoe, whose consciousness ends up trapped in a machine that extracts the stories they’ve thought up in their heads. While trying to escape the machine, the duo goes through several tales of their own creation, and we get a glimpse of some truly amazing, mind-boggling, and utterly innovative worlds.

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Not only are we treated to eight chapters throughout the game, but there are also pocket worlds known as Side Stories, where we are treated to more adventures in other realms. From universes that look straight out of Blade Runner to fantastical, magical landscapes similar to what you’d see in Narnia, here are the best worlds you can find in Split Fiction.
8
The Underlands
The Underlands is every bit a high fantasy land as you’d expect and the icing on the cake is that both Mio and Zoe are given shapeshifting abilities to boot, able to essentially turn into Groot, King Kong, or Tinkerbell. Dropped into a lush, vibrant and colorful forest filled with fantastical creatures, the developers have truly thought on every bit of this world, even managing to make the underwater bit as magical as the rest of the Underlands.
We also get a slight homage to Lord of the Rings with the magical, moving trees, as well as a truly surreal bit with a dance battle against the Monkey King. However, the Underlands saves the best for last with a jaunt into the Ice King’s palace, a chillingly beautiful location that seems exactly out of a fairytale. Here, you can sit on a bench to admire for hours on end. It’s nearly a shame to see it all go away after defeating the Ice King, but the Underlands was a treat no fantasy fan would soon forget.
7
Pig Farm
One of the more cutesy and lighthearted worlds in Split Fiction, this unconventional side story, unsurprisingly, is conceived by Zoe. In this world, the duo turns into pigs with special powers, with Mio able to use her farts to fly while Zoe is basically turned into a metal slinky, capable of stretching and reaching places of great height.
Set in a pig farm with many other pigs of varying sizes, you’re in for a barrel of laughs, as well as the sudden, terrifying switch-up of being turned into actual sausage and put on the grill. It’s surreal having to put mustard and tomato sauce all over yourself, and in all honesty, you might consider vegetarianism after this.
6
The Dying Sun
One of Mio’s sci-fi side stories, this alternate dystopian future sees you struggling to survive in an extremely dangerous world with a dying sun. This startlingly empty world puts you in a race against time, a heart-pumping adventure with challenging trials along with the threat of death with every wrong step.
Of course, there isn’t much time to appreciate the awe-inspiring sight of a blinding star when intermittent solar flares are out to kill you. However, this world is incredibly atmospheric, brilliantly executing the nail-biting tension that would accompany a world-saving mission like this, as well as a star on the verge of going supernova.
5
Neon City
A world that echoes both Blade Runner and Tron: Legacy, the futuristic city where the sun never rises is the first main level that you will have to navigate. It has one of the best level designs in the game, a city that’s both colorful due to all the blindingly bright neon billboards everywhere, and yet somehow still monotone.

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This city is associated with one of the most thrilling puzzles and action sequences in the game. This ranges from a full tour of this impossible world through a mad motorcycle chase and a floating car ride, but it’s also a sign of good things to come in Split Fiction.
4
Moon Market
Moon Market is certainly a cozy, charming fantasy village that won’t only make you coo at all the adorable cats around, but also make you gasp at all the Easter eggs cleverly woven into this world. There are not only cuddly animals and walking mushrooms but also oversized cats and lovable meowing all around, which makes Moon Market just a delight to be in, and you wish you could live there forever.
But the cherry on top of Moon Market is certainly the many references to other popular games and folk tales. There is a bonfire you can rest near that relates to the Dark Souls franchise, and the Baba Yaga House also makes an appearance in this sweet little side adventure.
3
The Notebook
Probably the most unique concept among the universes in Split Fiction, this hand-drawn world is a side story of Zoe’s, one that unfolds just as Zoe narrates the tale. Although the plot itself is quite typical of fantasy stories, it’s definitely the art style and linear perspective of this world that makes for some great and unusual way of storytelling.
From meeting bridge trolls to navigating a dark cave, our dashing heroes set out to save a captured prince from a demon (or a duck or crab, depending on your choice). Although it’s less of an established story and more of a rough draft since Zoe keeps changing her mind, it certainly makes for an unpredictable journey and a memorable one in comparison to the other worlds in the game.
2
Dragon Realm
A fantasy world isn’t a fantasy world without dragons, and when we first hear about Zoe’s love of the fantasy genre, we have a feeling that dragons are going to make an appearance. We’re proven right when we reach Zoe’s Dragon Realm. In this world, dragons are nearly extinct, and Mio and Zoe are in possession of the last two living dragons.
Naturally, the world is filled with cities that have draconic decorations all over, and the biggest treat of all is being able to fly your dragons to see the sights from above. From paddling through clear lakes to encountering the spirits of fallen dragons, the Dragon Realm is what you would expect and more for a world once populated only by dragons.
1
The Hollow
Although the fantasy worlds so far have been more lighthearted and innocuous in nature, the final fantasy chapter takes a darker turn, and it’s no surprise. At this point in the story, it’s Mio’s complicated life that’s been more of the focus, while the matter of Zoe’s life has only recently surfaced in the Dragon Realm. Zoe and Mio are thrown into The Hollow, a dark fantasy that has light sci-fi elements that make for an extraordinary world to explore.
With cryptid, serpent-like worms, creepy statues, unique architecture to even facing the mythical Hydra at the end, The Hollow is a wonderful, parting gift for us to experience before the final chapter and showdown with Rader.
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