The Procession to Calvary is a Adventure game from Joe Richardson with a 96% positive Steam review signal. Indie Lantern indexes it for players browsing by weird, single-player.

Game snapshot
- Developer
- Joe Richardson
- Release year
- 2020
- Playtime
- Varies by player
- Price
- $3.99
- Review signal
- 96% positive
Screenshots






System requirements
PC
- Minimum
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
OS *: Windows XP
Processor: 2 GHz – Dual Core
Memory: 2 GB RAM
DirectX: Version 10
Storage: 1 GB available space - Recommended
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
OS *: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10
Processor: 2 GHz – Dual Core
Memory: 4 GB RAM
DirectX: Version 11
Storage: 1 GB available space
macOS
- Minimum
- OS: Mac OSX 10.7
Processor: 2 GHz CPU
Memory: 2 GB RAM
Storage: 1 GB available space - Recommended
- OS: Mac OS 10.11
Processor: 2 GHz CPU
Memory: 4 GB RAM
Storage: 1 GB available space
Linux
- Minimum
- OS: Ubuntu 14.04 / SteamOS
Processor: 2 GHz – Dual Core
Memory: 2 GB RAM
Storage: 1 GB available space - Recommended
- OS: Ubuntu 14.04 / SteamOS
Processor: 2 GHz – Dual Core
Memory: 4 GB RAM
Storage: 1 GB available space
From Steam reviews
Review notes
The Procession to Calvary is worth a closer look if you want chaotic fun, exploration, short game, and hand-drawn.
Best for players who want chaotic fun, hand-drawn, emotional story, and exploration.
Check more carefully if you dislike unclear onboarding.
chaotic-fun
ToneThe appeal is messy, funny, and unpredictable rather than polished calm.
exploration
Play styleThe draw is moving through spaces, discovering details, and learning the world.
confusing-onboarding
FrictionThe first hours can be unclear without patience or outside help.
short-game
PacingIt is better understood as a compact experience than a long hobby game.
hand-drawn
SettingThe look is closer to illustration than generic 3D assets.
emotional-story
ToneThe story is framed as affecting rather than just plot-heavy.
strong-atmosphere
ToneThe mood, place, and presentation carry a lot of the experience.
Steam review snapshots
The musical pieces fit the scenes surprisingly well and add a lot to the overall atmosphere.It could be because I played multiple long games lately, but a short game really helps its favor here for me.Among them, the funniest puzzle involves a metronome, a roasted man, and snuff tobacco, delivering one of the most unexpected and hilarious…The puzzles are generally well designed, except for one that gives a misleading hint which makes the solution more confusing than helpful.Why it fits
Check it if you want adventure filtered by weird, single-player.
Who might skip it
Research further on Steam if you need verified accessibility details, exact playtime, or current system requirements.