HONK! Untitled Goose Exhibition
Highlights
- Explore vibrant displays of unseen concept art and sketches that reveal the creative journey behind the Untitled Goose Game.
- Engage with playable versions of the game, experiencing its development firsthand in a family-friendly environment.
- Delight in the exhibition's blend of comedy and chaos, celebrating slapstick history through interactive installations.
- Visit the Honk! exhibition in Maryborough, open Thursday to Sunday, and enjoy free entry until 12 October 2025.
It’s a lovely morning in the village – and you are a horrible goose.
Enter a world of comedy, chaos and calamity in Honk! Untitled Goose Exhibition, an exhibition that dives into the making of global-hit videogame Untitled Goose Game.
A game of stealth and slapstick about a naughty goose on the loose in an unsuspecting village, Untitled Goose Game was created by Victorian developers House House and released in 2019 to worldwide acclaim. Critics applauded its gameplay and comedy, awarding it D.I.C.E. Game of the Year and BAFTA Games Award for Best Family and Social Game in 2020.
This interactive exhibition offers new insight into the creative development of this viral game sensation, through displays of previously unseen concept art, sketches and design material. These are presented alongside playable versions of the game from its early development, exhibited publicly for the first
time. Appealing to both videogame experts and the unitiated, Honk! offers insights into game’s hilariously mischievous humour and development, and its referencing of slapstick history and comedic stylings back through a century of film and television.
An ACMI touring exhibition.
Images and Video
Dates & times
- Next occurrence: reoccurring
Accreditations
- Australian Museums and Galleries Association
Features
Actively welcomes people with access needs.
General access
- Companion Cards are accepted.
Physical – Wheelchair
Caters for people who use a wheelchair.
- A step free main entrance to the building and/or reception area (includes ramps or slopes with a maximum gradient of 1:14, otherwise are too steep for wheelchairs)
- Doorways which are easy to open and have lever handles (doorways 850mm or wider when open and not heavy).
- An accessible public toilet which is unlocked.
- At least one wheelchair accessible parking space with wheelchair accessible signage clearly displayed (International standards are 3200mm wide x 2500 mm high).