Four Last Things
Four Last Things is a Point-and-Click, Adventure, and Single-player video game developed and published by Joe Richardson for Microsoft Windows. The game lets the player use point-and-interface to manipulate the environment and must control the protagonist to advance the storyline. It is about sin, death, judgment, hell, and heaven as well, and the player needs to strive to improve the story. There are several exciting levels, and each level has a unique background and a set of tasks to complete. While playing the game, the player can enjoy the original music and the fully interactive world. Interact with other characters to uncover the secrets about the planet the player is standing in and behind the story. There are several characters, and each has a unique behavior. Using the point-and-click interface, the player can interact with objects, manipulate them, and find out the secrets to become the master. Four Last Things offer core features such as Interactive World, Classical Music, Renaissance Artwork, Pointing and Clicking, Sinful Behavior, and more.
#1 The Journey Down: Chapter One
The Journey Down: Chapter One takes you to an amazingly enigmatic underland setting and allows you to set yourself up into the character of Bwana who accompanies her companion named as Kito in order to search for a lost Journal. As the protagonist, you’ll have to go through challenging puzzles, obstacles and an unfriendly environment in order to find out Bwana’s long lost father, Captain Kaonandodo. With amazing point-and-click aesthetics, The Journey Down: Chapter One immerses you into an amazing journey and adventure in which you’ll have to follow a twisted plot and witness amazingly breathtaking moments. With a superb game setting, great visuals and sounds and an addictive game-play, The Journey Down: Chapter One is one of the best Episodic and Interactive, Puzzle-platform, games to play and enjoy.
#2 Talk to Strangers
Talk to Strangers is a Point-and-Click and Single-player Survival video game brought to you by Post Mortem Pixels. It takes place in the 2D world, and the game puts you in the role of the protagonist who needs to show off his abilities while surviving every day of his life. While playing the game, you must survive door to door conversations, ranging from mundane to bizarre and must struggle to sell products to strangers to earn money. In the game, you’re a salesman, and your objective is to sale listed products to strangers and advance through to the game to survive. But when playing the game, you need to beware, the world you’re in nothing precisely that it seems in the neighborhood. Start your work early in the morning and begin to sell products of the varied natures. To succeed, you have to put your small talk into good use and boost up your sale to become the master. Manage your money and try to balance your spending between items and motel daily costs that help you deal with depression and rage.
#3 Gibbous: A Cthulhu Adventure
Gibbous: A Cthulhu Adventure is an Adventure, Point-and-Click, and Single-player video game offered by Stuck in Attic for Multiple platforms. The game allows the player to have fun with a comedy-themed horror adventure and complicated tasks to complete, and all these things take place in the stimulating environment of Darkham, a place that never welcomes to anyone. But nowadays, kooky cults are venturing every area to invade everyone. It acts as a modern adventure that is heavily inspired, introduces exquisite HD art, detailed animation, and the lengthy storyline that will discover three protagonists who travel throughout the world to deal with abominations both human-made and cosmic. There are more than sixty hand-painted environments and comes with 2D animation. The game features two protagonists and reveals seventy fully voiced characters. More than 12,000 Dialogue Lines, Dynamic Lighting Effects, Hint System, Original Soundtracks, etc. are core features. With detailed graphics, relaxed controls, and superb mechanics, Gibbous: A Cthulhu Adventure is a fascinating game to play.