Session Respect Score
"Immersive VR documentary about abortion access with heavy subject matter."
Minimum session
120 min
Pausability
At save points
Resume friendliness
Some reorientation
FOMO pressure
Zero FOMO
Focus required
Intense
Session structure
Story chapters
Similar games
Platforms
About
Across the Line is an immersive virtual reality experience that combines 360°video and computer generated imaging (CGI) to put viewers in the shoes of a patient entering a health center for a safe and legal abortion. Using real audio gathered at protests, scripted scenes, and documentary footage, the film is a powerful hybrid documentary-fiction depiction of the gauntlet that many abortion providers, health center staff, and patients must walk on a typical day in America.
Media
Community Tips
Be the first to leave a tip!
Sign in to add a tip
Community Session Data
No sessions logged yet —
Context Tags
No sound needed? One-handed? Good for commutes? Players vote.
Sign in to vote on tags
Platform Notes
Does it actually work well on your platform? Community tested.
Across the Line — Session FAQ
- How long does a session of Across the Line take?
- The minimum meaningful session for Across the Line is approximately 120 minutes. This is the shortest play window where you can make real progress or have a satisfying experience, based on community data.
- Can you pause Across the Line?
- Across the Line uses save points or manual saves. You'll need to reach a checkpoint before exiting to avoid losing progress — factor this into your session planning.
- Does Across the Line pressure you to keep playing?
- Across the Line has no FOMO mechanics — no timed events, live content, or narrative cliffhangers. You can stop whenever you want without feeling like you're missing out.
- What is Across the Line's Session Respect Score?
- Across the Line has a Session Respect Score of 5.5/10. This score combines minimum session length, pausability, FOMO level, and pickup friendliness into a single metric for how well the game fits busy schedules.







