At the beginning of Grunn's demo, you hop off a bus, cross a charming little bridge, and find yourself in a lovely (if slightly unkempt) garden, the very one you've been hired to spruce up. It's only when you discover that your tools are missing and begin finding some strange polaroids that things start to go amiss. The townsfolk speak in a language you don't understand, there's a written note warning not to go out after dark, and a garden gnome that has a habit of moving when you're not looking. In three words, Grunn is a horror gardening game, but it's not the kind of horror where horrible monsters attack you. It's more subtle, like the uncomfortable feeling of putting your shoe on the wrong foot. Together with its lo-fi visuals, Grunn is a brilliantly eerie demo and with multiple endings and hidden secrets you'll have more on your to-do list than gardening tasks.