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Download and start playing Machinarium today. OW!!! [That was Randy whacking the back of my head.] Okay, okay I’ll be a little more specific. Machinarium is what might have happened if Dreamworks’ overlooked 1996 masterpiece The Neverhood and Pixar’s Wall E had a baby. The game takes place in a brown city of ugly and awkward robots. The nameless main character is a meek but resourceful little dude who spends most of the game dealing with bullies and trying to get back to his girlfriend. The gameplay is beautifully intuitive. You control the main character with the mouse, Your pointer changes in hotspots around the screen. If you can walk somewhere, the pointer becomes moving legs. If you can interact with something, you see a hand icon. Arrows indicate places you can jump or climb.
The second gameplay innovation is that your little robot character has three different “sizes.” There’s his normal configuration, which allows him the speediest movement. But he can also stretch to become taller or compress to become shorter, thus rendering additional areas of the game world accessible.
The puzzles in the game are a combination of inventory collecting and combining and classic Solve the Puzzle Room mechanics. For the most part the puzzles make sense, and there are contextual clues to help you. The game even has a two-tiered hint system for when you really get stuck. There is one hint per level which, when you access, gives you a visual nudge in the right direction. If that’s not enough, there’s a little minigame you can play which will unlock a blueprint of the entire series of steps you need to complete to accomplish your current objective.
This is a very modest game with big ambitions. I don’t think I’ve played a game since Portal which is such few things to complain about. It costs $20 and you should be playing it right now. You can download it from the company’s website listed above. Enjoy!
System Requirements:
This review is copyright Ray Ivey and Just Adventure and may not be republished elsewhere without the express written consent of the author. Republication of said review must also contain a link back to Just Adventure. |
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