The Forgotten City

The Forgotten City

This game is pretty good and I love it, tho it does have some problems but I do recommend anyone play it.

A very interesting an engaging story, a gameplay loop that’s pretty fun, and a lot of fantastic quality of life.

Pros:

-Fine Gameplay

-IMO brings the strengths of Skyrim of movements and conversation trees

-A Good story and mystery

-fantastic graphics

Cons:

-Combat is a bit janky

-Sometimes the animations and interactions bug out

Overall: This feels like another one of my favorite games Paradise Killer in that its a interesting mystery that engages you with story and compelling characters. I am excited to see more from this dev in the future.

Real player with 43.1 hrs in game


Read More: Best Adventure RPG Games.


Honestly a really good way of using a loop mechanic, it’s a bit of a gimmick at this point and usually not the most fun to have all progress made depending on resetting all progres. But with Galerius it’s not as tedious.

So the game story wise is pretty fun with some very interesting story lines. It first and foremost being a skyrim mod comes through here as it has a greater focus on many small stories to build the world around you. This ties together nicely to give the main story and the “canon ending” great build up and makes it feel organic.

Real player with 14.3 hrs in game

The Forgotten City on Steam

Escape the Loop

Escape the Loop

What if I told you, we’ve done this before? You’ve read this text, you’ve looked at these screenshots, and you’ve watched this trailer. Not once, but a hundred times. Maybe even more. And in five minutes, you won’t remember any of it – and do it all over again.

Escape the Loop is an open-world adventure game about time and recollection. You’re stuck in a time loop – after five minutes, the world goes back to its initial state. Everything resets. You keep nothing. Except your memory of past loops. Every loop will be exactly the same, unless you change it through your actions. Use your knowledge of previous loops to find out what causes the time disruptions and break free once and for all.


Read More: Best Adventure Time Manipulation Games.


Escape the Loop on Steam

Future Proof

Future Proof

This is a wonderful game of interconnected puzzles, there are lots of hints, riddles, and items to decipher. There are tons of ways to beat the game some silly, some very thought provoking and sad, and some really funny. The game has great humor too and it pays attention to details, like when the everything gets darker as your time runs out.

About the game play, this game is very difficult, and it is full of mystery. You will be trying your hardest to get through puzzles while the clock is ticking. Every death you’ll come back knowing more. Every time you’ll get a little further and you’ll probably never get far enough to know everything (unless you look it up). The game has so many puzzles twisted together as you progress through one you’ll find pieces to another and eventually you’ll find all the pieces to one and go that path and get to the end and realize you don’t like the way it ended or you want to make it end another way. This game has really good replayability. You will get to the end and start again so many times. This game is probably one of my favorite puzzle games and I highly recommend this game to anyone who wants a good puzzle and a hard puzzle.

Real player with 39.6 hrs in game


Read More: Best Adventure Mystery Games.


Welcome to Greensvale, a city full of mysteries and weirdness! Hidden under the normal looking surface you will quickly ask yourself a lot questions:

  • Why is there a cow in the garden?

  • How does it come that I see strange hints everywhere?

  • Had this city always these portals?

  • And why have not all people been evacuated 12 MINUTES before a fricking meteroid is hitting the town?

Ah right, the meteroid ….. so let’s get to the point. You are playing Sean, a teenage boy escaping out of school to run home and help your parents with the evacuation. Only to find out they are already out of town. So now you are standing here: 12 minutes before the town will be annihilated and the only escape route broken down. 12 minutes to find a way to survive or how to avoid the approaching doomsminute.

Real player with 12.4 hrs in game

Future Proof on Steam

Malvin’s Prehistoric Adventures

Malvin’s Prehistoric Adventures

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Malvin’s Prehistoric Adventures is an puzzle/adventure game that takes you through a variety of prehistoric environments and tasks you with solving short puzzles along the way.

The game’s story revolves around Malvin, a small child, and Danny, a time-travelling spirit. In order to complete his homework assignment, Danny enlists Malvin to help him collect assorted artifacts from different points in time. The plot isn’t engaging and feels bland. Beyond the initial exposition, there is little story and the game just uses it to drive you toward the next puzzle. This is far from a deal breaker, especially in a puzzle game, but given the game’s other issues, the lack of plot drives home the fact that this game is underdeveloped.

Real player with 3.6 hrs in game

Malvin’s Prehistoric Adventures is a fun and relatively casual, puzzle adventure. In this game, you’ll get to join Malvin as he is coerced by a young Spirit of Time called Danny, who also happens to be a lazy student, into helping Danny with his homework just so he won’t get held back for another year. Taking things in stride, Malvin travels back in time to different eras with Danny to solve various puzzles and collect the correct samples as required by Danny’s homework assignment.

Whimsical story aside, the puzzles in this game are fairly straightforward, and most of them are easy enough to solve. However, I’ve managed to get myself stuck in a puzzle where I was in the process of extracting the pieces of a shovel from rocks using a pickaxe. The challenge here lies in not describing what the puzzles are about. Don’t get me wrong - I still managed to solve the puzzles before it without knowing how a puzzle work or the rules, but this particular puzzle completely eludes me. Tried every possible trick I knew too!

Real player with 2.5 hrs in game

Malvin's Prehistoric Adventures on Steam

Time Storm

Time Storm

If don’t win like the game of the year at “The Game Awards”, it’s because you were bought

Real player with 4.1 hrs in game

I love this time travel stuff. you go back in time and interact with yourself is incredible. having to think about what moves you should make to help your future makes this game very enjoyable.

Real player with 3.6 hrs in game

Time Storm on Steam

Blue Time

Blue Time

BUY IT JUST TO SEE HOW BAD IT IS LOL

horrid graphics

broken menus

zero text in game to tell you anything

has dev commands that show up when you press keyboard keys

i thought for $1 it could at leastbe worth it

EVEN FOR $1 THIS GAME STILL ISNT WORTH IT

2/10 will replay in a year and see whats up then

Real player with 0.2 hrs in game

Blue Time on Steam

ChronoTecture: The Eprologue

ChronoTecture: The Eprologue

ChronoTecture Game Studio presents an indie video game created by an architectural designer.

After losing his cat Mobiius to lifelong illness, a father sees him again in a brief Dream. The father then designs and builds a device called The DreamCatcher, which allows him to induce a Lucid Dream at will. When the father finally sees Mobiius again in the Dream World, the DreamCatcher glitches and the father experiences sleep paralysis, trapping him in the Dream World against his will. The only way forward for the father is as a guide for Mobiius as he goes through his Final Dream.

ChronoTecture: The Eprologue on Steam

Epanalepsis

Epanalepsis

Video games are not defined by their interactivity, as so, so many suggest, but rather their repetitiveness. If there is one thing video games are primed to grapple with, it is the banal - it’s getting players to do the same thing over and over, with very little difference, but fistfuls of novelty and spectacle.

Epanalepsis is a short meditation on that repetitiveness, and as a result, is probably one of the most fascinating explorations of player choice and acausal game design I’ve seen in recent memory. It’s not clear why you’re doing what you’re doing, it’s not clear how the things you’re doing matter to the game, and it’s certainly not clear how those things precipitate future game events.

Real player with 3.1 hrs in game

Epanalepsis lets you glimpse the lives of three different people across various years: they all encounter the same man in red, said man is trying to warn them about the choices they’re going to make and how they might affect the future.

The game that follows is more of a slightly interactive story than anything else, you’ll walk around, look at objects, pick a few of them up and be faced with a choice for each character: the gameplay is thin and the story is sadly way too cryptic to make up for it.

Real player with 2.5 hrs in game

Epanalepsis on Steam

Guardians of Infinity: To Save Kennedy

Guardians of Infinity: To Save Kennedy

January 2087. Mankind has no time to lose. The time continuum is inexplicably unravelling by the hour, threatening to destroy the planet Earth.

Only one man can save time: temporal physicist Adam Cooper, inventor of a miraculous time travel machine - the Time Sphere. Cooper traces the cause of the time crisis to the events of November 22, 1963 and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, a tragedy that should not have occurred in the normal course of history.

Determined to prevent President Kennedy’s death, Cooper assembles the Guardians of Infinity, a unique and diverse group of five individual agents who will journey back in time to November 15, 1963. You assume the identity of Adam Cooper. Your mission: to thwart the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and successfully return to the future with all of your agents.

You guide your agents and send them to critical cities such as Washington, D.C., Hyannis Port and Dallas where they must convince the President’s family, friends, and associates that his life is in jeopardy. Send your agents to see Attorney General Robert Kennedy, Vice President Lyndon Johnson, or confront assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. This sets the stage for your climactic face-to-face meeting with President Kennedy where you must convince him of the impending danger awaiting him.

Can you save President Kennedy? Can you successfully return to the future? Can you discover the identity of the evil mastermind behind the assassination and the plot to destroy time?

Paragon Software’s Guardians of Infinity: To Save Kennedy is a complex strategy text game challenging the imaginative mind. This revolutionary game features:

  • Unique character interaction with sophisticated human communication and emotional response so life-like you will think you are carrying on an actual conversation with your agents.

  • Over 125 historical figures from the Kennedy era to utilize in your plan to save the President.

  • A background novel explaining the time crisis in detail and setting the stage for your historical mission.

  • A highly classified picture disk containing top secret illustrations of the events leading to your mission.

  • A climactic meeting between you and President Kennedy.

  • State of the art, highly advanced artificial intelligence techniques.

Guardians of Infinity: To Save Kennedy on Steam

Red Comrades 2: For the Great Justice. Reloaded

Red Comrades 2: For the Great Justice. Reloaded

A poor attempt to cash in on the success of the previous game, about 25% of the locations and dialogs are from the first game, when I started playing at first I though I’m playing the first game again. puzzles are TOO easy to the point where you just need to visit all the locations a couple of times and youre done. The story line is very weak, basically one of the heroes gets some brain implant and they travel to the future to get it removed via plastic surgery, thats it. Most of the characters are reused, there are maybe 3 new characters in the entire game. The game itself is very short,

Real player with 54.4 hrs in game

This game is more of add-on, than of sequel in a full meaning of this word. Much of game’s sprites vere reused, especially in the first location, but some new characters appears as jusk reskins of those from the “Red Comrades 1 ”. Also, albeit this game is stand-alone, it’s much shorter than the previous insallement, and can be easlily done in under in 50 minutes.

Conceptually, this game is mainly focused on how in the late 1990s developers saw “the land of the free” throught the prism of the Soviet folklore. They were also making fun of some “western realities”, that have been a fashion in Russia back then. Previous installement seemed to reflect briefly the same theme whilst our stay on the “Brothel level”, and this adds more.

Real player with 10.6 hrs in game

Red Comrades 2: For the Great Justice. Reloaded on Steam