Sunday, December 27, 2009

Adderall And Teeth Grinding

The Longest Journey

say then that The Longest Journey finished my self-imposed travel the world of adventures. There are many who have never played, but perhaps the only regret having left in the road is the Gabriel's Knight . There will be time someday but today I have no desire to curl up on that. I've had enough rubber ducks pinched in inventory, enough worries in my hands and destinations. The Longest

... I have not much to say. Resolved about 60% of the puzzles, the easiest-and the other 40%: I searched google. It is certainly a journey and a long game, not as compelling as it should (is one of those stories as they are becoming understood they lose interest), but the design of many landscapes we travel is nice. Perhaps that is the best in the game, the variety, though a variety of elements beaten.

not compare with the great exponents of the genre or his sense of humor (though it has a couple of moments that are surprising, particularly with literary ironies of its protagonist and the fact that sometimes very raw language) or the quality of the characters and the dialogues in general. As well after the classical era of the genre, has at least the advantage of offering graphics without pixel, and the advantage quite well.

Still, as usual, finishing leaves a feeling of melancholy (all what we did together, April Ryan).

basically already said all he had to say about graphic adventures. Now, purely subjective level, I'd say all that I played in 2009 The Dig was the big surprise ( Grim Fandango was as good as expected). Is exactly the opposite of Longest Journey: poor variety of landscapes, an adventure dried and concentrated, with virtually no dead environments supporting characters. Much more effective, for me, even though it has almost no sense of humor, which at times is rather difficult. ---

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