The remake of Please, Don’t Touch Anything has finally arrived! But is it worth picking up or should you avoid this altogether?
Lantern is developed by Storm in a Teacup and published by 1C Company. Dev team has had their fair share of atmospheric projects on Steam and I’m pleased to notice that all that previous experience was put to good use and ultimately gave us such a
Ah, Professor… Where do I begin? Wait. You’re an ape. You’re handy with a spanner… Pretty much everything else, to boot. Your partner is a dog whose bark is far worse than his bite. Still he can talk to the various sentients you two run into.
It’s hard to put my words regarding this title because of the high artistic nature of this game. It can be said to a lot of point and click games. Karma is less of a game, and more of an expereince, a surreal, psychedelic experience, certainly
Our main protagonist wakes up in bed with a girl just as naked as he is. To make things worse, he has no recollection of the previous evening. If that were you, what would you do, run for the door or stay and bond?
Life as a full-circle is perfect. Food, water, and shelter easily available and plentiful along with other pleasures. Life as a half-circle? Barely able to survive with the little food and water they can scrounge up. Forced to live outside or work
Exploration titles have been releasing off and on for the past couple of years and many tend to devolve into story-driven walking simulators with a bit of object interaction. I was getting a very similar vibe when I played through Apeirogon Games’
Beholder is a genre-defying game in the sense that it feels like a mashup of a bunch of ideas taken from several other contexts and put together into one nice package. The game takes place in a dystopian setting, which is heavily characterized by
At 1987 in Britain, our Hero is forced to sign a pact fresh from the grave in the game’s quick intro sequence. You can choose not to sign it, but that won’t get you far in the game. After a brief tutorial that you can choose to skip, you
Lithium: Inmate 39 is developed and published by Canu Arts. I honestly expected more from a company that’s just getting started on Steam. Their first project is clear flop.