Adventure game announcements for PC page 7
Escape Simulator review
Whether playing solo or co-op, you can lose yourself for days in both the official and community-made levels of this charming escape-room puzzler.
Conway: Disappearance at Dahlia View review
Part traditional investigative mystery, part Hitchcock-inspired observational thriller, the latest from White Paper should be in any detective fan's wheelhouse.
All You Can Eat review
It's not very filling, but this interactive comic should hit the spot if you're looking for a light snack between bigger gaming meals.
Don’t Escape: 4 Days to Survive review
Blending resource management and point-and-click gameplay, this replayable retro-styled adventure is well worth your (rapidly dwindling) time.
She Sees Red review
It's limited by some unfortunate design choices, but this live-action interactive thriller can be a bloody good time before the novelty wears off.
Zof review
It lacks the lore and worldbuilding of the best Myst-inspired adventures, but this beautifully surreal puzzler is pleasingly engaging when it's on.
Sherlock Holmes: Chapter One review
It makes a few decisions that will leave you of two minds, but this origin story is a substantial, thoroughly engaging collection of island mysteries.
The Whisperer review
Though seriously lacking in volume, this wintry Lower Canadian prologue offers a chilling teaser for the main adventure still to come.
KAPIA review
It could use a little more refinement, but this charming postapocalyptic adventure is as fun as it is funky, and a top choice for gamers of all ages.
AI: The Somnium Files review
It isn't implemented quite as smartly as it could be, but otherwise Spike Chunsoft delivers another enjoyably mind-blowing Kotaro Uchikoshi thriller.
Milo and the Magpies review
Grab your mouse and check out this very short but sweet and gorgeously painted feline excursion through the neighborhood to get home.
Slice of Sea review
Mateusz Skutnik's stylish otherworldly side-scroller presents an enthralling world to fathom as you piece together its wordless mysteries.
Amos Green’s Final Repose review
There's no rest for Carol Reed in her seventeenth Swedish adventure, a compelling new mystery that refuses to pull any emotional punches.
Saint Kotar review
You'll need to forgive a number of oddly charming weaknesses to appreciate this point-and-click adventure in all its bleakly atmospheric glory.
Alfred Hitchcock – Vertigo review
Pendulo's twisty but uneven psychological thriller is sure to mess with your mind, though it bears little similarity to the famed director's classic that inspired it.