Adventure game articles for Nintendo page 11
STAY review
Come for the thrilling remote-access mystery, stick around for the challenging puzzles and thought-provoking story that plays out in real time.
Karma. Incarnation 1 review
There's a mix of good and bad to live with in this psychedelically beautiful but often nonsensical Amanita-style puzzler.
Another Lost Phone: Laura’s Story review
In this comparative review with SIMULACRA, we touch on a pair of surprisingly different spiritual sequels dialed into the investigative phone sim formula.
Alone With You review
You might not love the light gameplay, but there's much to admire in this retro-styled sci-fi exploration of isolation and human connection.
The House of Da Vinci review
The many rooms of Leonardo's workshop are filled with intricate and often challenging, if sometimes finicky, inventions to manipulate and puzzles to solve.
The Silver Case review
There's no case to be made for anyone but Suda51's most ardent fans to check out his tedious, impenetrable early visual novel.
Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony review
The third installment follows the familiar series formula, representing a textbook example of murder mystery storytelling.
Perception review
Despite the clever conceit for its blind protagonist, this 3D horror adventure stumbles in key story and gameplay areas.
Bear With Me review
The three-part comic-noir mystery ends up stuffed full of gags, mature themes and old-fashioned adventuring goodness.
Kona review
This entertaining wintry survival adventure is a breeze to live through, though it misfires in a couple areas that lessen its impact.
Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair review
Things are looking up in the Japanese killing game sequel that improves on its predecessor in several key areas.
Tokyo Dark review
This visual novel-style Japanese thriller is light on challenge but worth a spin for story-driven adventure fans.
LAYTON’S MYSTERY JOURNEY: Katrielle and the Millionaires’ Conspiracy review
The next generation of Layton adventures inherits many of the same good qualities, though it’s still dogged by poor integration.
Lydia review
This surreal, hard-hitting interactive story about childhood trauma is light on gameplay but as emotionally dark as you can probably bear.
Little Nightmares review
More stealth-survival than puzzle-platformer, this intensely creepy side-scroller is sure to feed your horror craving.