Adventure game articles page 89
Supreme League of Patriots review
It looks and sounds super, but the giant-sized dialogues overpower all else in this three-part comic adventure.
The Aggie Awards - The Best Adventure Games of 2014
The awards are over for another year, with a whopping total of seventeen adventures taking home an Aggie statuette.
Amphora review
Blending colourful shadow theatre with a coming-of-age tale, this unique but finicky puzzler is overflowing with charm.
Grim Fandango Remastered review
Back from the land of the dead, what was already a masterpiece is now a remasterpiece for all adventure fans to enjoy.
MIND: Path to Thalamus review
This beautiful first-person puzzler looks and plays like a surreal dream, but neither its story nor puzzles will put much demand on your frontal lobe.
2014 Aggie Award Nominees
The envelopes remain sealed, but today we unveil the finalists competing for Adventure Gamers' coveted statuettes.
Randal’s Monday review
Its looks slick and gags abound, but this raunchy Groundhog Day-style adventure isn't much more fun than a week's worth of Mondays.
Adventure Gamers to add new digital storefront for adventure games announcement
Launching later this month, Adventure Gamers Store will be home to adventure titles from publishers and indies alike.
Following Freeware: December 2014 releases
Before turning the page completely on 2014, we've whipped up one final round-up of the top free indies.
Adventures in Storytelling: The Detail, Grail to the Thief
They may not be everyone's cuppa, but two very different quests await for the puzzle- and even visually-impaired.
Putt-Putt Joins the Parade flashback review
The lovable purple convertible blazed the trail for Humongous's junior adventures, though its formula was later lapped by improved sequels.
In memory of Astrid Beulink
Though with heavy hearts, we celebrate the life of a dear friend and colleague who was taken from us far too soon.
Gold Rush! Anniversary review
Faithful to every last dead end fault, the 2014 remake does little to enrich the original Sierra classic.
Doorways: The Underworld review
This unnumbered sequel unearths nothing new, instead offering a maze of fetch quests, patrolling monsters and horror clichés.
Adventures in Storytelling: Unrest, The Shopkeeper
From ancient India to Victorian England, you couldn't buy a puzzle in these experimental narrative experiences.