Thirsty Suitors Won’t Fit In. That’s the Point

If you want to smell like the spice cardamom, there’s a perfume for that. Or a lotion. Soaps. Candles you can buy at Williams Sonoma. That trips Chandana Ekanayake out. Growing up as part of an immigrant family in Maryland, the Outerloop Games co-founder and creative director tried to fit in as much as possible. If he showed up to school smelling like Sri Lankan food, kids made fun of him.

It’s different now, he says—at least for some people. “It’s more accepted to be ‘exotic’ for that kind of thing if you’re white. But if you’re from the culture, they’re going to make fun of you.”

“Fitting in” followed Ekanayake from his school days into his career as a game developer, decades later. Until recently, he struggled with incorporating his identity into his work. “All my games in the past in the industry are, well, made for mostly white audiences,” he says. “I think over the years I’ve also self-filtered—Do I have permission to say this?

That changed with Thirsty Suitors. For this new project Ekanayake took that fear and transformed it into something more powerful: a game with South Asian culture directly at its heart. It’s Outerloop’s take on romance and self-discovery, a story in which lead character Jala returns home after a brutal breakup, only to find herself fighting with all her exes. Literally—the game incorporates battles based around insults. Depending on how you fight, you can either reconcile with those exes, or not. It’s not so much a dating game as it is a story of hurt feelings and finding common ground.

Ekanayake refers to it as a “baby Yakuza game,” full of smaller moments that tie the larger narrative together. It’s got skateboarding, it’s got backtalk, it’s got cooking with parents. It started as a story about arranged marriage but Ekanayake and writer Meghna Jayanth ultimately backed off that concept.

“We both realized neither of us really can speak directly to arranged marriage,” Ekanayake says. “There’s a lot of different perspectives on it, and I don’t feel comfortable making a game about something that I’m not really familiar with.” (A shocking idea in an industry that has historically represented non-white cultures based on little to no knowledge of them—and whiffed.)

Instead, they made what they knew. Ekanayake talks about the game’s focus on cooking, where food is a touchstone for connecting with family. When Ekanayake goes home to Maryland, his family expects him at the dinner table. “‘Come over, you’re eating,’” he says. “You can’t say no.”

He describes traditions of passing down recipes and stories across decades that come from food, memories of tastes and smells that transcend generational divides. Not just that. It’s an emotional bridge, too.

“It’s really hard to engage our parents in an open, emotional conversation directly,” Ekanayake says. Cooking allows them to talk. Everyone focuses on the food. ”We start bringing up subjects and talking about it,” he says. “[My mom] will open up a little bit more, because they’re focusing on this cooking aspect of it and not talking directly.” The game’s cooking scenes are similar in nature, allowing Jala to bond with her family without the pressure of a direct confrontation.

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Author: showrunner