Abstract: After its real peak in the lighter half of the nineties the point and click genre felt almost instantly out of date. It was hit by a kind of grass-is-always-greener philosophy and where the FPS genre was green the point-and-clicks were like trying to f...
It's rare that a brand new point-and-click adventure blows us away but Machinarium is imaginative and memorable. 9.0/10Print this pageUser reviews (1)Share this pageNoticed something wrong? Report error/mistake.Add to my profile pageGame ScoresGraphic...
Abstract: If Osmos were an adventure game, it’d probably be a little something like this. Every scene and interaction is heavily reliant on the ambience that flows throughout the entire game: it’s slow, steady, monumentally sad and absolutely wonderful. The spee...
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Published: 2017-06-22, Author: Peter , review by: destructoid.com
Impressive effort with a few noticeable problems holding it back. Won't astound everyone, but is worth your time and cash. How we score: The Destructoid Reviews Guide...
Abstract: At the beginning of the game, you’re dumped unceremoniously into a scrap pile (you play as a little robot dude that is moderately cute, the furthest left robot in the screen above) with little or no introduction. The story then slowly builds itself t...
Abstract: In the world of Machinarium you play as a robot who will overcome some challenging puzzles to free other robots, free yourself and stop “bad” robots from blowing up a tower. All of this puzzle solving is set in a uniquely stylized mechanical world whic...
Abstract: When Machinarium was released almost two months ago, I thought it looked promising—a hand-drawn point-and-click adventure? That’s right up my alley. Unfortunately, it was released the same week that Uncharted 2 and Brutal Legend came out, and soon beca...