Play it on: Steam
Present aim: Remedy an old style thriller
Just a few weeks in the past, I discussed how I was captivated by Unavowed, a point-and-click journey from the parents at Wadjet Eye. Nicely, I’ve completed that one (it was nice) simply in time for a brand-new entry within the style to return alongside. And whereas Wadjet Eye’s output is most harking back to ‘90s journey video games that provided full voice performing and chic drag-and-drop interfaces, this new sport, The Crimson Diamond from designer Julia Minamata, is influenced by an earlier period of adventures, ones that ran in EGA and had you typing in what you wished your character to do. I can’t wait to discover its mysteries.
The Crimson Diamond is maybe most harking back to Sierra adventures, particularly the Clara Bow video games which noticed their plucky heroine tossed into homicide mysteries in the course of the roaring ‘20s. It casts you as Nancy Maple, a younger lady investigating the invention of an unusually giant and precious diamond in a city in northern Ontario, Canada. It’s clear from the trailer that her investigations will discover her encountering individuals with motives of their very own, a few of them sinister, and land her in no small quantity of peril. Signal me up!
Individuals usually speak in regards to the evolution of journey video games from textual content parsers to purely graphical interfaces as a web good, as if textual content parsers had been only a crutch, a relic from the style’s early days that we not wanted, however I’ve at all times considered them as two basically totally different approaches, every with their very own strengths. I feel there are methods through which the presence of a textual content parser can encourage artistic considering {that a} purely graphics-based interface doesn’t at all times permit for, and along with digging into the plot of The Crimson Diamond, I’m desperate to see the way it makes use of this design factor that so not often will get employed in trendy video games. All in all, it feels like an ideal match for a comfortable weekend. —Carolyn Petit