Wednesday, 14 October 2015
Review: The Book of Unwritten Tales 2 (Sony PlayStation 4)
Review: The Book of Unwritten Tales 2 (Sony PlayStation 4)
Interactive Points Of Interest Come In Many Flavours. Some Exist Solely To Give The Player A Chuckle; Such As A Library With Plenty Of Easter Eggs Nods To Everything From Final Fantasy And Minecraft To The Dragon Eggs Of Game Of Thrones. Others However Are More Important To Progress Through The Game. I Liked How The Game Threw Red Herrings Into The Mix, In Providing Items That Clog Up The Inventory Without Necessarily Being Useful. Most Modern Games Condition Players To Assume That Everything They Come Across Through The Adventure Is Important In Some Way, So It’s Quite Fun To Be Left Wondering What An Item Will Eventually Be Used For… Or Whether It’s Useful At All. And At Other Times A Single Item Needs To Be Broken Down Into Its Components Before It Can Be Useful. A Good Part Of The Game’s Mental Challenge Is In The Manipulation, Construction And Deconstruction Of These Items, Which Means Finding Each New One Comes With It A Sense Of Intrigue And Enquiry.
Interactive Points Of Interest Come In Many Flavours. Some Exist Solely To Give The Player A Chuckle; Such As A Library With Plenty Of Easter Eggs Nods To Everything From Final Fantasy And Minecraft To The Dragon Eggs Of Game Of Thrones. Others However Are More Important To Progress Through The Game. I Liked How The Game Threw Red Herrings Into The Mix, In Providing Items That Clog Up The Inventory Without Necessarily Being Useful. Most Modern Games Condition Players To Assume That Everything They Come Across Through The Adventure Is Important In Some Way, So It’s Quite Fun To Be Left Wondering What An Item Will Eventually Be Used For… Or Whether It’s Useful At All. And At Other Times A Single Item Needs To Be Broken Down Into Its Components Before It Can Be Useful. A Good Part Of The Game’s Mental Challenge Is In The Manipulation, Construction And Deconstruction Of These Items, Which Means Finding Each New One Comes With It A Sense Of Intrigue And Enquiry.
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