60°
8.0

Indie Game Insider | The Night of the Rabbit Review

Night of the Rabbit is an excellent point-and-click adventure...if you can get it to work on your computer.

Read Full Story >>
indiegameinsider.com
coolbeans3953d ago

"Nobody wants to play a point-and-click game where the entire screen is white, or where your character’s upper half is obnoxiously plastered over everything on-screen."

Same with me. I guess the problem does really persist among laptop gamers, like me. (Although my requirements do in fact meet their minimum standard posted).

20°

Steam Specials Weekly Wrap-up #2

Kevin writes: Now that Steam Family Sharing has been officially out for a few days have you all been making use of it? I certainly have, joining my account with a few of my friends and suddenly I have over 250 games available to me.

Read Full Story >>
thereticule.com
20°
8.0

Night of the Rabbit Review | Gaming Furever

The point-and-click adventure genre has been a longstanding bastion of quality in video gaming. Titles like Day of the Tentacle, Monkey Island, and The Dig are ubiquitous to everyone that considers themselves a gamer, formative experiences for many, and archaic, if important, milestones in history for the rest. The amusingly ancient technique of "picking everything up and rubbing it on everything else" style of puzzle solution has always lingered like a dark cloud over more recent adventure games, and as more advanced, streamlined games continue to come out, interest in the storied genre has flickered to a mere candle in the dark.

It's unfortunate, then, that a game as incredibly, meticulously crafted as The Night of the Rabbit goes unnoticed, as it solves nearly every problem inherent in the genre.

Read Full Story >>
gamingfurever.com
20°
10.0

The Night Of The Rabbit Pixel Judge review

PJ: "Have you ever dreamt of having magical powers? Or your imagination take you beyond the four drawing-and-poster-covered walls and into mystical worlds from within your head? Only he who once was a child himself, even if the time long past, would believe in the story of 12-years-old Jerry. Would you laugh out loud, or rather smile, hearing that the greatest dream of little Jeremiah Hazelnut was to become a magician - and that it actually came true?"

Read Full Story >>
pixeljudge.com