Lilly’s rescue
A really fun game.
– Real player with 29.3 hrs in game
Read More: Best Casual Cats Games.
Quite fun game and very cute game. Quite the short gameplay but if you are trying to get all achievements you might waste an hour or two on it.
– Real player with 13.5 hrs in game
Gray platformer
It’s a really great game with minimalistic graphics and i loved playing it. Please add more levels :)
– Real player with 3.1 hrs in game
Read More: Best Casual Indie Games.
Beautiful and minimalistic graphics, interesting and varied levels, a good soundtrack.
– Real player with 1.7 hrs in game
Projector Face
Projector Face is a point & click adventure game about a projector who gets a body and goes outside to try and befriend the local children, even though he can’t talk. Gameplay is your classic ‘gather items and use them on objects in the game world or on other items in your inventory’. It’s a very short game: it will most likely take you about an hour to finish it. It’s also pretty easy. Sometimes, you’ll have to think about what to do next for a moment but it’s always a logical solution so you’re never really stumped.
– Real player with 4.8 hrs in game
Read More: Best Casual Indie Games.
Cute little casual point and click game.
I loved the atmospheric feeling of slightly sinister but clever, tricky and cute/sad story line, although I cannot tell you much about it without spoilers.
So you’ll have to play to find out what I mean.
Liked the style it was drawn in, plain, simple, pretty, clean and different!
Like the silent movies in the old days. Very intriguing in my humble opinion. It gave the game that special touch.
If this ever gets a sequel or a similar game of the same developer, I would play it too.
– Real player with 4.1 hrs in game
Loot Hound™
I have to say that I really enjoy this game. I love how it was made and how it looks! I enjoy the voice acting. The names of the items found can be a bit silly, but sometimes they are kind of funny. I find it funny when one of my dogs decide they want to pee all over something. Successfully running away from the park patrol gives me a great deal of accomplishment. My dogs likes to bark a lot. Sometimes my dogs like to run from me and then I gotta chase him down or my dogs like to get caught around a tree or rock, it is so funny. Collecting loot and completing my collections are so much fun and extremely addicting!
– Real player with 13.1 hrs in game
Its a fun little game with a good amount of humor and creative puns. The game-play is simple and easy to pick up and it offers a decent challenge for a game which is just a glorified scavenger hunt. Great if you want to play something different and change it up. For the price, actually kind of worth it.
Only real con I would give is the controls are very frustrating. Sometimes your dog wants to do their own thing for no apparent reason outside of dog logic and they’re going to do it regardless of how inconvenient it is to you. You want to go right, screw you, the dog goes left. You want the dog closer, naw the dog feels like walking away and breaks the leash. The park warden is chasing you, the dog thinks this a great time to stop and sniff some stuff. The dog secretly hates you and you’re going to have to deal with that fact. It can get really aggravating sometimes and I found myself slamming my keyboard once or twice and how unresponsive the controls felt, but I guess that’s how it really feels to walk a dog.
– Real player with 11.8 hrs in game
TAL: Arctic 2
Fun little maze game.
– Real player with 1.4 hrs in game
This is almost exactly the same game as TAL: Arctic. I mean, I’m presuming the mazes are different - even if they sure as sh*te don’t feel that way - and the music is different and the Achievements are executed a bit differently. But basically…exactly the same game.
Oh, wait! Your yeti-like beastie now leaves footprints in the snow! Well then, I stand corrected. Seeing footprints appear in my wake definitely made the almost-hour of sameishness go quicker.
– Real player with 1.2 hrs in game
Roundabout
Roundabout is a cheesy low-budget FMV game starring a limousine driver, a mechanic, a lady in a hat, and a $40 skeleton bought off of Amazon.com with surprising entertainment value.
In Roundabout, you control a constantly rotating limousine. You play as Georgio Manos, the world’s first revolving limousine driver. Your limousine is constantly rotating at all times, which forms the core of the game’s gameplay – you know how to get from point A to point B, but your constant revolution makes your life a lot more difficult. Early on it is fairly simple, navigating your way around stationary obstacles, but as the game progresses, things get increasingly more difficult, with moving obstacles, barrels which cause you to bounce in the opposite direction after striking them, platforming (done while spinning all the while), and the odd unique gameplay challenge to make things harder.
– Real player with 21.0 hrs in game
Most of us have been gaming a super long time by now, and anyone who’s been around can tell that ideas are slowly running dry. Innovation is something more or less absent from the game industry as we see the market pump out bland shooters, uninspired retro platformers, Diablo-likes, or roguelike-likes sticking with elements they know sell while struggling to find ideas that haven’t been exhausted already. Every great once and awhile a game comes a long and changes everything capturing the hearts of players everywhere by simply presenting us with a mechanic so strange and simple yet is an absolute blast to play. A game that makes the player stop and ask “Why hasn’t anyone thought of this before?”
– Real player with 16.0 hrs in game
TAL: Wizard’s Adventures
Who says every game must be big and ambitious to enjoy?
Simple and easy games can be fun, too and that is what brings me to the TAL Franchise back and back again.
I like Maze Games. I played many of the AMAZE Game Series to the End and i like the TAL Series.
It began with TAL: Arctic 1-3 where we guide an mysterious Creature on his way, then as Part 4 we got TAL: Jungle and here, as Part 4 TAL: Wizard Adventures.
From Part to Part the Series grows slowly on Ideas. While you have to run simply through Mazes in Part 1, you have a little Wizard Apprentice Story in little Episodes with Puzzle Mini games and more Mechanics in the Mazes here in Part 5.
– Real player with 1.4 hrs in game
I got mine as part of a bundle. It’s a simple maze game but I found it enjoyable enough and relaxing to play through. There are some minor obstacles and power-ups you’ll use to complete some of the levels.
– Real player with 1.2 hrs in game
GORILLA TOWN
Fun game, stylish graphics and audio. Lots of action and lots of destruction.
– Real player with 2.2 hrs in game
The game is trying to be like the Tanks of flashgame glory. Controls jsut don’t feel right in my bit of a play through, and the bizarre story isn’t enough to hook me either.
– Real player with 0.1 hrs in game
Strange Telephone
Strange Telephone is a surreal adventure / exploration game that borrows elements from classic point & click adventures, combined with the exploration of a simplistic world generated from a fixed seed.
I only finished 4 of the 11 endings (and 2 of them are just simple deaths), but I think I played enough to have a solid opinion about the game, and it probably won’t change much.
There’s not much of a story, but the game doesn’t really need one: You’re trapped in a surreal, dream-like world, there’s a door that leads back to reality, and you’re trying to escape by finding a key for that door.
– Real player with 25.0 hrs in game
This game is fascinating, charming, heartfelt, but also quite flawed. It is clear that a lot of love went into it, resulting in an earnest, yet imperfect piece unlike anything I’ve seen before.
It draws strong inspiration from Yume Nikki, but does its own thing instead of being a fangame, and I applaud that. It’s got the atmosphere, the droning music, the focus on exploration and the surrealism, but has surprisingly original mechanics, tones down on the horror and cranks up the cuteness.
The first things that set this game apart from the one it takes inspiration from are the clear objective and the concise Adventure-esque puzzles. You’re presented with a door that requires a key, and need to find said key. The puzzles are half reasonable, and half riddled with that darn moon logic I detest so much in adventure games. I eventually got to that state of rubbing everything against everything else hoping something works, which adventure game fans will probably relate to.
– Real player with 5.1 hrs in game
TAL: Arctic
Here we are - less than 1€/$, which is always nice for indie games!
This one in particular is called “These Amazing Labyrinths” - if you’re wondering about the game’s title xD - and asks us to help an unknown creature to get through portals and lots of mazes - in fact, we have a whoppy 60 levels!
The game starts simple - a play button, a skins button and the exit one.
We’re gonna use only the WASD keys, so no weapons or anything else involved - R to restart, F4 to play full-screen, which is quite recommended (for some reasons, in my PC it opens windowed and can’t be “enlarged” with alt+tab or anything similar).
– Real player with 1.8 hrs in game
Lost…
Alone…
Somewhere…
An unknown Creature, wandering through icy Mazes, trying to find a way out.
It is your turn to help.
Well, everybody who knows me, know how i like to start my Reviews.
This one didn’t make it so easy, because it is a short and simple Game, not a big one like BATTLETECH.
Anyway, the first time i recognize this game was in a sale, by the interesting Name: TAL:Arctic.
Then i have had a look at it and was fascinated by the nice Cover Picture, that shows this unknown Creature.
– Real player with 1.0 hrs in game