Saturday, January 22, 2011

Awakening: Moonfell Wood Game Review

Travel to Princess Sophia to find his people continues into enlightenment: Moonfell wood. After awakened from a century-long sleep in dreamless Castle, Sophia has managed to escape the castle grounds and is now looking for help for finding his fellow humans. Guide Moonfell Wood and assist to seek an audience with the Queen of the fairies. Use your skills to help Sophia find his family and friends and take its rightful as ruler of the Kingdom!

Awakening: Moonfell Wood continues the adventures of Princess Sophia as stated in the first game of the series - Awakening: the Dreamless Castle. She had fallen into a magical sleep of century-long and had awakened to find his land deserted with no other humans in sight. She has escaped from the grounds of the Castle and is now on its way with wood Moonfell to seek an audience with the Queen of the fairies. We hope that fairies have a way to find what happened to his people.

This game is an adventure game of puzzle of objects hidden as its predecessor and the same fantasy beautiful atmosphere and landscape. You will make in a forest enchanted in different day and night versions and meet interesting characters like fairies, Centaurs, the dragons for pets and many more. Most of them help you in your quest to find the Queen of the fairies and the responses it holds, but there is an evil Witch and his servants who lurks on too.

The gameplay has a style adventure standard puzzle, with a main interface where you see your immediate environment as well as all the elements find you along the way. You discover the world moving from stage to stage, each of which has several areas with which you interact. A unique aspect of Moonfell wood, is that these scenes have both a day and a night version with different interactive objects in each version. For example, a dark alcove would be visible during the day, while an object under a hive accessible only while the bees go to sleep at night. You can switch the forest between day and night by finding and activating a magic Portal.

Areas of interest in each scene will be either objects that you can interact with, or run scenes for hidden objects, puzzles and mini-games. Interactive objects usually require an item in your inventory as a stick to poke an inaccessible fungus. or nuts to a squirrel (Yes, it's a fantastic game). The hidden object scenes come in two flavors. There are traditional garbled mess of items that you need to find a list of required objects. There is also an interesting type hidden object game where you are presented with a beautifully painted tarot card, and you have to find all occurrences of a particular item on it. An example would find all 9 birds on the map of the forest. It is reminiscent of old visual puzzles where you identify faces are in an image.

Puzzles also correspond very well the theme of the game. There are jigsaw puzzles of style where you need to gather the pieces of old parchment or exhibits vases together broken. There are also lots of logic and pattern matching puzzles. These puzzles are not very difficult and are fairly easy to solve if you pay attention to the various clues provided for you. The puzzles are not intended to be brain-busting challenges, but serve as a nice interstitials to keep gameplay become too monotonous.

The artwork for the game is beautiful and painterly sensation that adapts very well fantasy theme. Scenes of haunting night with light purple and white crystals are particularly beautiful. Music is also appropriate for the game, enchanting and soothing at the same time. There are a fair few "Adventures" required in the game, so be prepared to move back and forth between scenes that solve you puzzles and unlock new items to be used.

With a large number of the object hidden recent games featuring creepy houses haunted by supernatural powers, an adventure game fantastic as with beautiful forests and magical faerie-folk is a very welcome change. You'll love Awakening: wood of Moonfell if you loved the other fantastic adventure games like the original Awakening: the Dreamless Castle or similar games, such as the Enlightenus series.

Rating: 4.0 and 5.0.

You can learn more about Awakening: wood from Moonfell to http://www.hidden-puzzles.com/awakening-moonfell-wood.html

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