Item Collector - Pirates

Item Collector - Pirates

Item Collector - Pirates - Play through a huge amount of different levels with increasing difficulty and alternative exciting game modes. Bring you brain to the limit and find all the matching pairs!

Product feature:

  • 100 levels

  • 100 achievements

  • Easy gameplay

  • Includes sfx and music

  • Great graphics


Read More: Best Hidden Object Minimalist Games.


Item Collector - Pirates on Steam

Hidden Shapes Black Skull - Jigsaw Puzzle Game

Hidden Shapes Black Skull - Jigsaw Puzzle Game

Fun game, great artwork, very satisfying to complete. I just wish the interface were a bit more responsive.

Real player with 3.5 hrs in game


Read More: Best Hidden Object Naval Games.


A good game like the others in the series. Simple mechanics, with a relaxed atmosphere, but this time with pirate themes.

Definitely an essential item for the hidden shapes collection.

Recommended!!

Real player with 2.0 hrs in game

Hidden Shapes Black Skull - Jigsaw Puzzle Game on Steam

Nightmares from the Deep: The Cursed Heart

Nightmares from the Deep: The Cursed Heart

¸.•*¨).•´¸.•*¨) Nightmares From The Deep ¸.•*¨).•´¸.•*¨)

(¸.•´ (¸.*´ ¸.•´(¸.•´ The Cursed Heart ¸.•´ (¸.*´ ¸.•´ (¸.*´

~Overview~

STORY: 3/5

DIFFICULTY: 1/5

GAMEPLAY: 3/5

GRAPHIC: 2/5

REPLAYABILITY: 2/5

~My Personal Progress~

Story: 300% [beat the game three times, in regular and expert mode]

Time played: 10h05m total [3h55m 1st run (regular) + 3h15m 2nd run (expert, mahjong achievement) + 2h55m 3rd run (expert, hidden object achievement)]

Achievements: 100% [15/15 ACMs]

~Review~

“Nightmares From The Deep: The Cursed Heart” is a simple hidden-object-/puzzle-game set in a mystic “cursed Pirate”-Adventure.

Real player with 10.1 hrs in game


Read More: Best Hidden Object Adventure Games.


Nightmares from the Deep: The Cursed Heart is one of the very first games developed and published by one of the top names in Hidden Object games; Artifex Mundi. Released in 2012, this deep adventure was released 2 years later on steam, and gained immediate attention.

You play as Sarah Black, a museum owner whom just like in any other night before a big event, is incredibly busy with paperwork and artifacts. But tonight is different, it’s a special show, a night dedicated to Captain Remington, one of the most infamous pirates in the Caribbean.

Real player with 9.7 hrs in game

Nightmares from the Deep: The Cursed Heart on Steam

Uncharted Tides: Port Royal

Uncharted Tides: Port Royal

I played Uncharted Tides: Port Royal on Windows. An enjoyable game with differing types of HOP’s and a reasonable storyline. The minigames were good at a decent difficulty level. I have played many many HOPA’s and though this isn’t up with Lost Lands, (understandably as that is a huge tale over many episodes,) it’s good in its own right. On first playthrough I missed one Achievement, Sea Shanty, (which i’m still at a loss as to how I missed it),

I didn’t use a walkthrough though there are ones available,

! https://www.bigfishgames.com/content/bf-blog/en/walkthroughs/uncharted-tides-port-royal.html#5 or video walkthroughs such as

! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcGn0er7GDM .

Real player with 10.3 hrs in game

I got this game as part of a bundle. Decent hidden object puzzles. Most of the puzzles were intuitive and whenever it is not you can use hints which are infinite (casual difficulty).

The hints recharge fairly quickly and I never felt completely stuck with the puzzles.

Talking about the story, I found it to be… okayy. I didn’t like the game’s music in most places. It could have been a more piratey theme.

Characters don’t have any depth. For example, Jane’s father / Ben and all other characters are completely useless because they don’t help us in anyway. They merely command us to do something because they are unable to do it. But at the end Ben gets thanked which was odd.

Real player with 10.1 hrs in game

Uncharted Tides: Port Royal on Steam

Nightmares from the Deep 3: Davy Jones

Nightmares from the Deep 3: Davy Jones

The final chapter of the Nightmares from the Deep trilogy.

Game: Museum Director Sarah Black and her daughter Cory are kidnapped by the infamous Davy Jones during a public and seeming well attended museum presentation about Davy Jones (compiled from all the information Sarah had gathered during her first two adventures). (All I can say about that is getting donations and funding for the museum repairs and more exhibits should be easy after such a supernatural, flashy, and public kidnapping.) I digress. The ever resourceful mother-daughter team manage to break out of their jail cell and attempt to leave Davy Jones ship but are recaptured. Davy Jones is going to kill Sarah but Cory makes a contract with Davy Jones to save her mother’s life. Davy Jones instead of outright killing Sarah forces her to walk the plank. (Typical pirate) The adventure begins here. Find Cory and break her contract (and every other contract Davy Jones has ever made along the way, including Davy Jones' own contract.) Sub-storyline: Find out even more about Davy Jones and just how he became the infamous “devil” of the sea, and why. And who that mysterious girl ghost is and her relationship with Davy Jones.

Real player with 12.5 hrs in game

Nightmares from the Deep 3: Davy Jones is the final chapter in the Nightmares from the Deep series, with this third game completing the story of Sarah Black, and her endeavour to stop the endless curses by Davy Jones, the infamous sea devil.

After the troublesome events of Nightmares from the Deep 2: The Siren’s Call, one would expect Sarah to rest upon her journey, but no, she went deeper and kept her museum with one goal in her mind; The search for the truth, the true identity of Davy Jones, and the pirates that once spread havoc over the seas. This is exactly what fires up our new journey, as Sarah, with the help from her daughter Cory, do a presentation of Davy Jones, to a live audience at the museum. According to new information acquired by Sarah, the sea devil, it’s not just a legend, he was real, a flesh and bone person, giving a whole new perspective of the story behind the most dangerous pirate who ever sailed the seas.

Real player with 9.1 hrs in game

Nightmares from the Deep 3: Davy Jones on Steam

Robinson Crusoe and the Cursed Pirates

Robinson Crusoe and the Cursed Pirates

Thumbs up! This is pretty good for a hidden object game. This game was originally released in 2010, but I was able to run it under Windows 10. This was a sequel to Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, but I couldn’t get the original to work. I’m not sure why one works and the other doesn’t, but trying to get old games to run is always a gamble.

This game is mainly hidden object scenes and I thought that they did a good job hiding most of the items. There were a few that I couldn’t find, but there are hints available if you get stuck. There is not much in the way of a point and click adventure, but there is a wide assortment of mini-games. I didn’t like all of the mini-games, but you can skip the ones that you don’t like.

Real player with 6.5 hrs in game

There’s Treasure to Be Found Here!!!

Wow, I must say when I started this game, I was expecting another dull, boring, badly scripted HOG. I love hidden object games, but to be honest there are some bad ones out there. This isn’t the best as far as the story goes, but the puzzles and hidden object scenes are worth it! There are some easy puzzles, some that took me 10-20 minutes to figure out, and some that are just plain hard!! The puzzles were mostly very different from the normal puzzles in HOGs also. Very, very creative and unique for the most part. The hidden object scenes are very nicely put together, and not just a bunch of stuff thrown around. Don’t pass this up if you’re looking for something a little different in an HOG, especially if you like puzzles/brain teasers/riddles to figure out,

Real player with 5.9 hrs in game

Robinson Crusoe and the Cursed Pirates on Steam

Nightmares from the Deep 2: The Siren’s Call

Nightmares from the Deep 2: The Siren’s Call

Game Information

“Nightmares from the Deep: The Siren’s Call” Collector’s Edition is a Hidden Object Puzzle Adventure game. The game was developed and published by Artifex Mundi.

“The Siren’s Call” is the second episode of “Nightmares from the Deep.” Previous episode: “The Cursed Heart.”

Since this is a collector’s edition game, it comes with extra features that are not available in its' counterpart; the standard edition.

The Game Review

Game Visuals

I want to mention that the visuals in the game are nicely done with a painted feel to them. The visuals can be adjusted in the game’s option menu.

Real player with 15.6 hrs in game

The second game in a present series of three. It is stand alone, and can be played out of order. However, as with all series games, each game despite its own individuality does build on the previous story and there are previous story references.

Story: Museum Director Sarah Black, who has gained a reputation by breaking a Davy Jones' curse, is brought an ‘artifact’ by a mysterious man. The ‘artifact’, however, belongs to a pirate captain Murray who has made a deal with Davy Jones. Captain Murray, now mayor of the town Kingsmouth, wants it back. The artifact powered by the ‘magic’ of his captive mermaid controls the ship destroying kraken. The mysterious man, suffering under the curse brought on the captain’s deal (along with the entire town Kingsmouth) wants back his humanity and to free the captive mermaid. He enlists Sarah’s aide to free the mermaid and to break Davy Jones' curse.

Real player with 13.6 hrs in game

Nightmares from the Deep 2: The Siren's Call on Steam

Duke Grabowski, Mighty Swashbuckler

Duke Grabowski, Mighty Swashbuckler

When I first backed Duke Grabowski on Kickstarter, it was after reading Bill Tiller’s response to questions about the game’s apparent focus on “seducing wenches,” which could (fairly) lead to the assumption that the game might put forward messaging that promoted the objectification of women and promotion of relationships as being extrinsically valuable rather than intrinsically valuable. I feel like it’s not uncommon to see “We’re doing it ironically,” as some sort of all-purpose foil for criticisms of objectionable content, but this message was slightly different, and talked about wanting to put a character in a situation where they were surrounded by these kinds of narratives and pressures and showing how that character could cultivate perspective and reject them.

Real player with 7.8 hrs in game

Very funny and short classical point-and-click adventure game from the people who have brought us ‘The Curse of Monkey Island’.

Now, that was a masterpiece even if it was created without Ron Gilbert, but… most of the later works by Bill Tiller and Larry Ahern turned out to be, well, not so good. ‘A Vampyre Story’ and ‘Ghost Pirates of Vooju Island’, in spite of their similar humor and visual style, were not successful and, to tell the truth, rather boring.

Luckily, ‘Duke Grabowsky’ falls almost in the same league as ‘Monkey Island’! Something just like earlier Telltale projects, before they fired Dave Grossman and switched to gameplayless visual novels.

Real player with 4.3 hrs in game

Duke Grabowski, Mighty Swashbuckler on Steam

Heart of Moon : The Mask of Seasons

Heart of Moon : The Mask of Seasons

Wasn’t what I was expecting, but it’s not too bad and can be addicting. Works on Triple Screen.

Real player with 21.8 hrs in game

A fairly standard match-3 game, but with nice music and really good graphics in the cut scenes where you get to find things. I think it’s good for younger players as well as those looking for an easy time waster. The rewards are nice, and come frequently enough to be satisfying.

Real player with 18.0 hrs in game

Heart of Moon : The Mask of Seasons on Steam

Hero of the Kingdom II

Hero of the Kingdom II

Hero of the Kingdom II brings back the same hidden object x visual novel x management blend that defined its first installment, expanding both the number of locations and adding depth by way of caves and dungeons. The game is longer and has a lot more mandatory bartering to raise gold, but ultimately doesn’t step outside of its comfort zone. Much of the following is taken word for word from my review of the first, because it’s still true:

You can read my original Hero of the Kingdom review here.

Real player with 10.4 hrs in game

I vaguely remember playing through Hero of the Kingdom about a year ago. It was a blast of casual RPG adventure and I played it through in a couple of evenings. The second instalment is best described to the players of the original game by “more of the same”: Light-hearted adventuring in a fantasy-lite setting, being a goody-goody adventurer who has great deeds in his near future. I’d roll in a casual take on the hidden object genre as well.

Storyline is also fairly similar to the original: the protagonist has basically lost everything but he’s an honest, hard-working dude so he’s not complaining and instead just starts getting stuff done. Then everything goes down the drain again and he has to go save not only his sister but basically the whole civilized world. Being the embodiment of righteousness he’s going to help every beggar, farmer and sovereign along the way, even the shady kinds because of “the greater good”.

Real player with 9.0 hrs in game

Hero of the Kingdom II on Steam