The Inner World Review

We’re reviewing Headup Games and Studio Fizbin’s Inner World today, and for good reason since it recently had a patch that boosted its content again.

Now we’ve been playing around with it and we’re happy to let you know this is all what point and clicks should be.

 

The Story

You are a young Asposian by the name of Robert. He plays a musical instrument, which happens to be his nose as well.

The game is all about being different, and that sometimes being different is just what allows you to save the world.

There’s the Basylians, which are dragon creatures who petrify their enemies, but the people from Asposia think they are Gods.

The Abbot is the man who recommends them doing this, and… well let’s not give you any spoilers and stick to the review itself.

 

The Gameplay

The game is interesting, the characters are relatable and unique and the voice acting is a good addition since it helps you bond with the game.

You can see the developers poured a lot of hours on crafting this beauty, and that they love what they’re doing.

Sometimes, the joyful game takes a dark turn when the Basylians are doing their evil deeds, but for the most part it is quite relaxing, with some crazy concepts like fluffy mice, burglar pigeons and poison swamp creatures.

It also has jokes intended for both adults and kids alike, kind of like Disney does them.

 

The Puzzles

The Puzzles are enjoyable and some take guesswork to solve, but if you ever feel stuck then know they have a “hint” system installed to help you out, and the best thing is there is no paid currency to buy hints or something.

You get as many hints as you want, but you’ll want to solve it everythink yourself so the game gives you less obvious hints at first, progressing to more obvious ones as you proceed.

So you don’t have to fear getting the whole solution once you request a simple hint.

 

As for special features, the game has auto save so you don’t have to worry about checkpoints, manually saving, getting your progress deleted and so far, as you get the auto save pretty much after you do anything at all.

There are achievements to be collected, so if you are a completionist you’ll enjoy getting all the awards you can in this game, even it that is not necessary to complete the game in any way.

 

The Bad Things

Now for the bad things, we’ll finish the Inner World review by telling you about the negative aspect of the game, which is when you try to interact with a character and it keeps detecting objects instead, it is a gameplay bug that doesn’t influence your experience too much, but it is boring as heck.

The game is normally on sale and pretty affordable, so if you like adventure games with a point and click mechanic, you’ll have a good time.

 

Overall Score:

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