Sunset Over Imdahl

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Sunset Over Imdahl is an RPG Maker Game by Theo Mathlein. It was released in both English and a (more or less complete) German translation. The story is about a boy named Lohn who, being the last survivor of The Plague, gets the chance to travel back to the beginning of the year in order to stop it from spreading.

The English version can be downloaded here.


Tropes used in Sunset Over Imdahl include:
  • Drinking Contest: Deconstructed. Even if Lohn wins the contest, his light body weight causes him to pass out just outside the inn, and his winnings are stolen.
  • Dub Name Change: Averted, since the main protagonist is still called Lohn in the German translation, where Lohn means salary.
  • Everybody's Dead, Dave: How the game begins.
  • Fantasy Gun Control: The invading army has guns, but Imdahl still relies on swords and bows, and Hoess carries a sword himself.
  • Heel Face Turn: Hoess, officer of the enemies besieging Imdahl. At least he pretends to do so.
  • Jerkass: Andrea, even before The Plague starts.
  • Kick the Dog: Technically, Hoess stabs it with a sword.
  • Kill'Em All: Every named character and all but one unnamed one.
  • I Did What I Had to Do: Hoess is willing to kill everyone in Imdahl, and even die himself, to fulfill his oath.
  • I Need a Freaking Drink: Hoess assumes this is the case when he finds Lohn after the drinking contest. Lohn doesn't bother to correct him.
  • Kid Hero: Lohn. He's 12 years old, as his grave reveals.
  • Jump Scare: You will get one if you try to get into into the Developer's Room via RPG Maker.
  • Low Fantasy: Fits seven of the nine items on the checklist on that page, and barely avoids the last--it's a useless war to keep a crumbling empire together, and sorcery is barely present, let alone good or evil.
  • Mini Game: Rat-catching, bat-catching, the above-mentioned Drinking Contest, and finally a Sword Fight.
  • New Game+: If you picked up a certain key near the end of the game, you keep it for the next playthrough.You can use it on the door to the upper left of the statue in spring to meet the developer. Depending on your answers, he may tell you about how he did the graphics or gets upset and tells you to play the game.
  • Nice Job Breaking It, Hero
  • Shoot the Dog: Hoess's suggestion to Lohn--find whoever brought the plague to Imdahl, and kill her. Hoess views the destruction of Imdahl in the same light--if it's allowed to become independent, and other regions follow suit, the collapse of the empire will bring untold chaos.
  • Snow Means Death
  • Talk to Everyone: Hoess's advice to Lohn. It's a particularly cruel example, given that the more people Lohn talks to, the more he'll spread the virus.
  • Time Travel: The portal Hoess creates goes to each of the four seasons of the year.
  • Troubling Unchildlike Behaviour: Lohn's badly psychologically damaged, and other people pick up on it.
  • Vestigial Empire: Lohn's prediction on what will happen to the empire from which Imdahl seceded.
  • You Can't Fight Fate: A particularly evil example, as most of the game indicates the opposite. Then it's revealed that Lohn himself carried the plague back to the past.
  • You Are Already Dead: Hoess uses variants of the phrase twice, though he puts a time-travel spin on it. The first time, it's in regard to a guard he murders. The second time, it's to Lohn himself after finding his tombstone, and serves as a request for him to Face Death with Dignity. Lohn points out that he at least got a burial, and he has no intention of letting Hoess get one.