Secret Files: Tunguska may not be an excellent game. It may barely strike at the tier of being average. But this is a game where you feed a cat a heavily salted pizza after taping your cell phone to its back so it can record a phone conversation indoors. If you're a fan of old puzzle games and horridly illogical combinations of items, this is a cheap enough ($20 MSRP) look back on a dying genre. But because of its faults, most other gamers will find this game boring and tedious.
Rob Pitt writes: I know a lot of people who picked up a Nintendo Switch in order to play the first party games and the big AAA exclusives which won’t be coming to other platforms, games such as Mario Odyssey, Pokemon, Bayonetta 3 and more.
However, I usually pick up a new console to play the more niche and lesser known titles which also can’t be played on any other console, such as the upcoming Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3, Tokyo School Life, and Friday the 13th: Killer Puzzle. However, there was another game which actually influenced me into finally picking Nintendo’s console up, Secret Files: Tunguska.
Secret Files: Tunguska is a point-and-click adventure game based on the mysterious Tunguska phenomenon that occurred in July 1908, in which the Siberian region of Tunguska was engulfed in an inferno of flames that turned everything into debris and ashes.
The critically acclaimed adventure classic Secret Files Tunguska by Animation Arts is now available as a premium game for Android devices.
• 12+ hours of suspense-laden playing time
• No micro transactions or in-app purchases
Two things that impress me about this game.