Adventure game reviews page 67
Starship Quasar review
Relationships form the nucleus of this short-but-stellar re-release of Crystal Shard's sci-fi drama.
Hektor review
Its shifting environments offer a unique maze-like concept, but its gameplay and story will both leave players hopelessly in the dark.
The Perils of Man review
This offbeat sci-fi time-traveller by Bill Tiller and Gene Mocsy is a low-risk, high-reward adventure.
Dead Synchronicity: Tomorrow Comes Today review
This gritty post-apocalyptic adventure will keep you immersed in waves of dark, mature storytelling.
The Charnel House Trilogy review
This three-stop train ride jumps the tracks of reality yet never veers from its linear course through the unknown.
Broken Age review
Double Fine's long-awaited two-part adventure is now complete, forming a truly memorable whole.
Fire review
Daedalic's lite puzzler crackles with creative charm, but burns through its limited premise all too quickly.
Corto Maltese: Secrets of Venice review
Hugo Pratt's comic antihero comes to life in a puzzlingly casual adventure experience.
White Night review
Where it fits along genre lines isn't black and white, but this stylish haunted house survival thriller has terrifying atmosphere to burn.
Pneuma: Breath of Life review
While its metaphysical premise seems fresh at first, this 3D puzzler winds up feeling stifled by its familiar formula.
The Adventures of Bertram Fiddle: Episode 1 - A Dreadly Business review
The debut episode doesn't offer much mystery, but plenty of nosy explorating through a Victorian era cartoon London.
Munin review
Some lesser-known Norse mythology is squarely at the center of this stylish world-turning puzzler.
Decay: The Mare review
This short horror game may be clichéd in setting, but its chilling touches are plenty sobering.
The Book of Unwritten Tales 2 review
The epic fantasy sequel is pregnant with quests and quips and stunning production values, if not quite delivering the same story quality as its esteemed predecessor.
Belladonna review
Beautiful but short-lived, the Frankenstein tale is resurrected in this tragic adventure chronicled largely through journals.