If you can stomach the problems, you'll be rewarded with a bright and breezy strategy game that's light, but fun. How many other games have a genetically modified soya crop as an end of chapter boss? Exactly.
Audio/Visual - 7
Gameplay - 6
Value - 5
Innovation - 6
Overall -
Games Asylum: Eclois does have a certain charm to it. It's pleasing on the eye and surprisingly deep, with the ability to level up your squirrels and choose your own order to tackle the levels. Dorian can power-up his skills by visiting a magic shrine and praying for more abilities with add an RPG-style vibe. If only the developers had sorted the fundamentals out first.
From the review: "First thing, I don't want to save the forest in Ecolis. It looks pretty f**ed-up. It seems to be populated exclusively by genetic mutations - there's a pink squirrel, a conker with alligator feet and some old codger who has eyebrows, but no eyes. It looks like Disneyland Chernobyl. If anything, I want to napalm the forest, then nuke it (from orbit – it's the only way to be sure, but not having a space programme hampers my plans), then send Ray Mears in to eat whatever's left over."
IncGamers' Lee Tharjick is back with his popular UNPLAYED review. This week Lee looks at Ecolis, and eco-friendliness as a whole.
Oh, no he didn't! =D hahaha.
Edit:
And despite demands to play the game, I find no traces of him doing so :)