Activities
Today
Ninglors Log 421
December Progress:
9
PPU monthly:
done
December Additions:
51
Games finished this week:
Won/Gifted Games:
Lost Lands: The Four Horsemen – Ty escollo <3
Layers of fear – ty Dani <3
Bandle Tale – Ty <3
Slipways – Ty adub <3
Escape First Alchemist – ty Volpe <3
In the Building: Cats – Win \o/
In the Building: Cats 2 – Win \o/
A pact with me – Ty Sword <3
Bought Games:
Currently playing:

So much from me :3
Have a lovely week!
Queen Ninglor
Yesterday

The timeline for this event is as follows:
1 December– 22 December: Nomination phase
28 December – 03 January: Voting phase
4 January: The winners are announced
Voting Phase
You can now vote for you favourite games HERE!
You can win a Steam gift card
We’re raffling off 25 EUR for Steam, just in case you’re in danger of wiping out your backlog! Just enter your BLAEO name in the Google form and you’re in! The winner will be chosen by a random draw and announced on January 4th! (Just in time to still take advantage of the winter sale)
Some important things to point out:
1) You don’t have to vote in every category if you’re unsure about which game(s) to pick.
2) You can edit your votes at any point before the end of the voting phase. All you have to do is save the link that you get after submitting your votes.
3) And if you have privacy concerns: your e-mail address will not be collected by the Google form.
4) If you’ve won in a previous BLAEO Game Awards raffle, you can’t win again this year.
Dec 27 2025
December Abandonment #1 (Backlog)
Walking sims are weird; some are extremely captivating such as Firewatch and Tacoma, and some are a slog that sometimes are worth it (Gone Home), and many times are not (Suicide of Rachel Foster, Dear Esther). But Ethan Carter was the first one I abandoned. The game tries to take pride in leaving you to your own devices, i.e. providing no direction, and while it is a fine approach, it starts to become frustrating really quick.
I was able to hit certain cutscenes locked behind puzzles, but the puzzles were so aimless that I was wondering what was expected of me. I eventually stumbled upon the mine maze and I felt I was just going around in circles, no idea what to do, no idea how to progress the game, and really not connecting with any semblance of a plot or place.
After 1h30m of aimless wandering, I decided it was enough. I might watch a playthrough on Youtube, but most likely not. What baffles me is that I've seen this game being recommended quite often, and I cannot for the life of me understand why. Maybe I'm the problem, not the game, but I'll wait until someone proves that
December Assassination #6 (Backlog)
Please consider liking my review on Steam - it means a lot to me!
I can't believe I slept on it for so long. Arkham Asylum is a freaking masterpiece that has aged like fine wine.
You're thrown in a world that is fully realized and cohesive. It's big enough that it feels real, not just a series of videogame levels, but it's still small enough that you'll know your in and out from each and every building by the time you beat the game.
The pacing and the plot are explosive - villains get introduced and dangerous situations arise with every heartbeat, and the downtime is usually accomplished by you traveling between locations. Gameplay switches frequently between a melee brawler, an open-world free roam (albeit on a small open-world) filled with secrets and shortcuts to explore and discover, and stealth/predator sections where the power fantasy is complete. By the time you're getting used with your kit, the game throws another tool to your arsenal and asks you to make full use of it before repeating the formula.
Villains are not just memorable as a pacing mechanism - they are also accompanied by great setpieces, be it in the form of combat encounters or puzzle sections. You'll be surprised at how many villains you'll have kicked the ass of by the time the credits roll. And all of this is packaged in a beautiful game that has this light cel-shading which hasn't aged a day in the last 15 years. This is what they mean when they say that art direction never gets old, graphics do. I particularly experienced a lot of issues with the sound mixing being all screwed up, which is a shame since the few moments it worked well, it worked really well, and really showcased how the atmospheric music can really make the moment, and how crazy and undone the voice acting for the villains really is.
Arkham Asylum really encompasses the best of action, platforming, exploration, stealth, and technical aspects in a plot that never loses steam and is graceful enough to be over before it gets old. It's perfect. There's nothing else I can say here. It's a work of art made by people who are deeply passionate about the character and its lore.
If I have to find fault with one thing, is the melee combat. I played the game on Normal and most of my deaths were in combat encounters. A lot of praise has been showered in how 'fluid' the combat is, but the issue is that you don't really have a lot of options while in combat - it's be aggressive (and probably be retaliated by some attack that you couldn't counter in time), or be reactive (countering everything in a chicken game where it's hard to build a meter), which gets even harder when enemies start wielding knives (which can't be countered) or probes (which you can't attack directly). While innovative and probably ahead of its time, it's the aspect I liked the least 15 years after the release, and that I hope was improved in the sequels
Dec 26 2025
December 2025
Played: 8
Started: 5
Beaten: 4
Added: 5
Completion avg: 80.997% (-0.027)
Points avg: 4982 (+15)
Progress bar:
Beaten:
Progressed:
Added:
Pretty good month for gaming this time, although it usually is when work calms down, and we move to the holidays. Not much family stuff when we live in different countries now, which is a bit sad, but also leaves more space for games
On par for beaten games (still need to write about one of them though), and made some good progress into Coromon - might beat it before the end of the year even.
For other progressed games it was a quick party achievement in Icewind Dale; finally beat Restless Spirit in ESA, which was tough, but rewarding; and some various new things in Binding of Isaac, since i've been getting back into that recently
New additions are slightly low, which is also good. Didn't buy much in the winter sale (yet) [Edit: nevermind, went back and bought two more, and added them to the post since it's a while until January's round-up] and just won a Christmas gift yesterday
Slightly early recap for December, as is tradition by now. Year recap should be soon, although i need to write something about Call of the Sea first.
Hope everyone's Christmas/December period has been good so far, and continues to be good (or becomes so, if it hasn't been, i guess)
As these things usually tend to turn out I had bigger plans for the final, the BIG update, but holidays kinda turned on me + Steam had some community issues at the time of writing this so accessing reviews themselves turned out to be cumbersome. So here we are, finishing off the year with a Grab-Bag for the third time in a row. It’s useful to have these not quite TL; DR reviews around since I get to re-purpose them in collected form.
Enjoy the read.
Werewolf: The Apocalypse – Heart of the Forest ( PC (Steam) – Adventure, CYOA – 2020 ) + STEAM REVIEW
A blend of CYOA meets VN, Heart of the Forest relies more on the strength of its license than anything else. It is worth pointing out events in the game ARE loosely inspired by actual protests opposing the logging operations in the forest of Bialowieza, Poland. License? Yeah, this is based on Werewolf: the Apocalypse from World of Darkness setting.
We step into the shoes of Maia Boroditch who is on her way to aforementioned forest along with her friend Anya to join the sit-down effort protesting the devastation of the primeval forest. She's of Polish origin with some ties to the region, but nightmares about wolves and the forest itself make no sense. It doesn't take long before the tourist act is over and Maia ends up embroiled in what's actually about to go down. It involves discovering her own history and being inducted into a brand new society she knows nothing about. Awooo, indeed.
I have to admit Heart of the Forest didn't exactly make a great first impression on me. Story is, well, what you see is what you get. A lot of chest-beating and howling at the evil logging company and corrupt politicians enabling it, characters who stand in divided "we kill to send a message vs surely we can use words first" camps, but oddly enough... that's Werewolf: the Apocalypse for you. Big aspect of the license, besides playing as a raging bundle of fur, is the ecological angle where you protect both material and spiritual worlds. It's the latter the game nails far better, in my opinion. Especially as you get vivid descriptions of invoking ancient rites, conversing with Patron spirits and just the alien nature of the forest. Having accompanying surreal art greatly helps with selling the team's efforts. General writing quality is enough to get the job done, though. Some descriptions are relegated to hyperlinks and your character sheet so expect to reference those.
Speaking of which, there's the whole CYOA aspect to touch upon. There are definitely choices affecting your stats and outcomes to decisions that warrant multiple playthroughs. I got the impression managing your three resource - Rage, Willpower and Health - is what truly matters as there's no RNG to contend with. Certain actions increase you abilities so you decide what to focus on. My complaint is game takes until the halfway point to remember it's actually about Werewolves, and then it drowns you in new information. Bit jarring, but as someone familiar with the material it was a relief to finally get. What I didn't like was the pivotal moment of choosing your Tribe, only to get a list of mere FOUR +1 to pick from. Werewolves aka Garou have this entire society I won't go into since you get you a decent primer on it from various characters. As far as it pertains to protecting Bialowieza, at least.
Would I recommend Heart of the Forest? It could've used rich tabletop rules better, but what you get fits within the CYOA framework with its lite approach. As far as I'm concerned game edges into recommendation territory mainly due to its presentation and tackling the spiritual side you might not expect coming from a Werewolf game. Taking just a smidge over an hour to finish it's a really short game, albeit one with replays adding very tangible value.
Long Gone Days ( PC (Steam) – JRPG – 2023 ) + STEAM REVIEW
Games taking place in the real world, even more so using actual existing countries as such, are surprisingly rare. Add JRPG into the mix and you get Long Gone Days. Is it worth it?
After a very brief in medias res opening we assume control of soldier 716 deep within the underground Core base since he's been selected as replacement leader after current sergeant got himself injured. Not knowing much beyond the fact you serve Father General, you're transported away with your unit on a brand new operation. All wearing Polish army uniforms to Kaliningrad in order to "de-escalate the situation". Well, our boy is a sniper and he quickly discovers those aren't military insurgent heads he's been popping. Inadvertently involving a company medic, our pair pieces together the Core isn't exactly being altruistic, end up on a blacklist and have to flee to save their lives. As they join refugees in the city they adopt names – Rourke and Adair – while hoping to save themselves and get the word out as to what's REALLY happening. Military machine marches on across Europe with both overt means and subterfuge wherever it can.
Don't get me wrong, there's some heavy handed political and moral preaching involved here, especially when you get to Germany with a newly rising political party, but I think the novelty of taking place in our real world is enough to carry a rather straightforward story. It's the kind of setup where antagonist is rather obvious and his "you are the sacrifices I'm willing to make" approach to realize his own idea of world peace is nothing new to genre aficionados. What works is plot taking you across multiple countries, where you're at first lost because your characters only speak English until you find a local, where you get to see the fallout firsthand. From population displacement as they flee an approaching army to a city that's under martial law. Somehow, this makes distractions like side quests all the more cumbersome when someone asks you tear down posters or find lost pets.
Your cast gradually expands as you advance, but aforementioned Rourke and Adair are main characters since everyone else rotates in and out depending on story relevance. I'd say Lynn is the strongest supporting character although that could just be my bias given I picked her for bonding scenes. No hidden agenda on my part, no sir. On unrelated side note: game did not deliver on the romance front if that's what you were looking for. What's available aplenty is survivor's guilt, PTSD and everyone struggling to do something against this seemingly overwhelming organization even governments seem to be in cahoots with. All the while trying to stay chipper. For my taste? It's a bit too much on the activist side where everyone is irrationally eager to jump into the thick of it. Even pick up weapons as normal civilians let alone help total strangers when they admit they're turncoats from the very enemy.
I wish there was more to say combat-wise here, but it's classical turn-based affair presented in first-person perspective. Grounded setting means the most outlandish enemy you'll fight is a drone, but what enemies exist are neatly presented. Character art gets a budget bump compared to typical pixels you'll see in the game world. If there's something worth pointing it's that encounters are fixed and there's no concept of leveling up. Most battle rewards include a choice between a curative item or restoring SP which you use as resource for skills. You acquire skills when story progresses past certain milestones. What I'm trying to say is, Long Gone Days isn't some systems-heavy dungeon crawler, but rather quite the opposite. Just remember to stun and/or blind enemies for easy wins, even boss battles with their enormous HP pools. You do get to play around with character equipment as far as customization goes, but you'll have to make do with what you find out there.
Would I recommend Long Gone Days? Well, I was on the verge of giving a proper TL; DR review, but quickly realized it would be a padded overkill on my part. Taking about ~10 hours to finish, and getting a bad ending because I think I concluded some battles too fast to get dialog choices, this is not a long investment if you're remotely interested in the premise. As the opening splash screen will inform you, this was made in Unity Engine but you could've fooled me and said RPG Maker was involved in how it plays. Some really nice assets and even higher fidelity "animated" scenes for pivotal moments.
Citizen Sleeper ( PC (Steam) – CYOA, RPG– 2022 ) + STEAM REVIEW
I was going to call Citizen Sleeper a CYOA, but at its core this is more RPG territory. After all, you're selecting options informed by narrative as well as mechanical backgrounds that result in decisions when they matter, at least as far as they pertain to your character. Speaking of...
You step into the shoes of a Sleeper, a digitized mind in an artificial body, as you wake up in a daze on a failing space station. Erlin's Eye stands at the edge of interstellar society and has become a focal point of sorts. Lost in your memories and making connections with various individuals, you also realize things went astray, both on Erlin's Eye with its vying factions and a much wider corporate collapse that preceded everything. Everyone has to make dues, and Sleeper has an additional problem - your body is rapidly decaying, and only your corporate owners have the stabilizer that can press STOP on the expiration date.
Citizen Sleeper is a rather straightforward game where you manage two key resources: the condition of your body and Energy, which fluctuates at a much faster rate. Yes, there are cycles that you plan your actions around, but the game itself is not timed... few instances notwithstanding, and even those don't result in a game over. You better become acquainted with d6 fast because rolling dice is your primary means of interacting with the game. There are five Skills in the game, right? Well, since there's no combat to speak of in this affair, completing Drives, aka character-related quests, nets you upgrade points you then allocate to those Skills. What THAT translates to are perks. Like the invaluable "let me shuffle my entire hand to get a chance at better dice" one, but also determining some Skill tresholds and generally making rolls easier up to +2 bonus. Your Condition is extremely important, as it is divided into five segments, and the worse it gets the fewer dice you have available in the cycle. Let's just say acquiring some stabilizer should be your primary concern, and since that's tied into accumulating money you have an incentive to actually do things.
Which could land you in hot water since you end up in this Sims-like loop of trying to balance your needs: when to go eat for Energy, when to work for money, and how to optimize your Condition, between actually doing the narrative content, which is the main draw. The simplest way to imagine how Citizen Sleeper operates would be to visualize all locational and character actions as reputations that require multiple repeated actions on your behalf to advance. Say you need money. So you go work at the bar, and each "shift" is a separate dice rolls with relatively easy difficulty. On success you net yourself X amount of money, and on failure you get less, with neutral being somewhere in-between. But as you're doing those shifts, something like "get to know the locals" progress pie is filling in the bottom with every success. You only get to fill it once, and after you do a unique event tied to that place happens. Perhaps you meet the cute owner who has her ideas about having a distillery, and she ropes you into helping, which activates another chain reaction. Almost the entirety of the game is structured in this manner; even if it sometimes involves tangible resources you have to provide, sometimes you just have to wait a particular number of cycles, sometimes individual events are timed albeit never too tightly, etc.
Until the very end, when you've dealt with your problems, have completed most of the Drives, and are flush with money/stabilizer, there's this careful dance going on with choosing where to go and what to do next. I was surprised by how certain Drives can give you a possible ending without much fanfare. Endings you can refuse, mind you. Three episodes added post-launch are worthy additions you might want to hold off on until you're comfortable with your Skills and resources. Keep that scrap on-hand, Sleeper.
Unlike my usual ramblings, I've barely touched on the narrative because it's best experienced firsthand. There's some great writing here with characters packing their own stories from every walk of life. Even setting itself is a puzzle to work out. I haven't even mentioned the station's Cloud which provides a separate layer of hacking and dangers that go with it, for example. The art style they went with for character portraits is just wonderful and meshes natively with the ever-looming model of Erlin's Eye in the background. Presentation elevates this game far above "just RNG and text".
For what was supposed to be a short review, this certainly went on. Would I recommend Citizen Sleeper? A firm yes.
It would’ve been nice to have gotten TWO milestones this year, but reaching #100 Reports will more than do for me. There’s couple of prototype posts I made in the my first year here at BLAEO although I don’t necessarily count those. Second achievement will come naturally next year and will make me feel really old...
So what happened in 2025 for yours truly? Had some eye troubles that landed me in surgery, twice, and turned out to be the primary culprit for late activity in December as I was out of commission for good two and a half weeks. Then the holidays rolled in and I called it done. Some minor car damage that needs to fixed as well. Surprisingly not caused by being half-blind behind the wheel at one point. Would not recommend, 1/10. As far as games go, I’m really happy to have finally finished Pathfinder: Kingmaker as that was the game I was on-and-off with for multiple years. One change I made late into this year was to have a dedicated review link to Steam where applicable, but BLAEO Reports will always remain my go-to as Steam has a character limit and I love my walls of text. ;)

Yeah, I’m a couple months late on this because not only did I not finish playing all the demos before Next Fest ended (as usual), I didn’t even finish before redeeming my last month of Game Pass, so that was another delay. However, I’m finally done now and can post all of my recommendations (in no particular order):
Platformers
Always a lot of good ones each time
Never played the originals, or even the 2.5D sequel from a few years ago, but this one seems like a promising 3D platformer. My only concerns are that the ball form is kinda hard to control and that level 3 doesn't do a great job of letting you know ahead of time that the only way to cross the bridge in time is by using the ball form's extra speed, so I ended up having to redo that segment.
Kinda like Steamworld Dig where you have to dig for materials and head back to the surface to unload them while also avoiding the occasional spike or enemy. Not sure I'd buy a full version of this, but the demo is okay.
Level design is pretty simple, but again, not bad for the price of free. The motorcycle skeleton boss is pretty tedious if you try to avoid damage, but goes down pretty quick if you tank a hit or two to get multiple hits in yourself.
Oh hey look, another Celeste clone. If you leave a room too soon after collecting a Yin-Yang symbol, it doesn't actually count as being collected, and if you're too close to a teardrop when you dash, it won't actually give you another dash like it's supposed to, but everything else worked fine.
Solid fixed-camera 3D platformer, but there was one optional left-to-right segment with forward/backward-moving platforms where the camera was too low for you to judge their depth properly, making it much harder than it otherwise would have been. Levels are fairly linear, not unlike Super Mario 3D World, but it still has collectathon elements with the candies, and the demo doesn't give clues or unlock alternate starting positions for players who beat a level and want to go back for any candies they missed.
Between the lengthy cooldown your powers have and how long it takes for that one character's amulet to activate mechanisms, this game is REALLY slow at first. However, if you stick with it, the levels start being designed more around these elements so their sluggish nature isn't as big a problem.
A metroidvania that tries to have both real time shooting combat and Undertale-style turn-based combat. As you might expect, those genres don't exactly blend well with each other, so you'd need to be able to enjoy both gameplay styles separately to appreciate this game. I also had some control issues, but according to the game's announcements, many of those issues have been fixed.
The emphasis on speed definitely gives this game a different feel than the first game had. Jumping also felt shorter, and I think that's a combination of the camera being zoomed out more and the level design encouraging charged jumps, which ironically kills the intended fast pace since you have to hold the down button for a second to charge it. Levels still have three coins, but the HUD also displays a white square that I was never able to figure out what it was for; my best guess is that you get a stamp there for beating the level fast enough, but I'm not doing that. Also, apparently, one of the demo's two levels is gonna be exclusive to the demo and not in the full game, which is…a choice.
Decent controls and solid level design, but no stage select, so if you skip a collectible, you've missed it permanently. Also, the cyan hexagons that are supposed to let you keep jumping in midair can sometimes be finicky and not work when it looks like they should've.
This game shakes up the Celeste formula by also making you pick up boxes and throw them onto switches to open the path forward. Plus, the boss's chase sequence is broken up by fixed-position rooms where you actually have to go hit a switch or something while avoiding the boss's projectiles, though it's kinda cheap where the path opens up, but the game won't let you go forward, and then suddenly the boss zooms across the screen into that path (even though it just got shown retreating into that path), so you'll get hit and die if you're already there trying to progress.
The first GB Studio platformer I actually had some fun with, though it was still pretty easy, and it wouldn't surprise me if the full game just stalls out and spins its wheels after this.
The first boss was kinda cheap at times, and the demo ended right before the second boss, but the level design was pretty good, utilizing its color-switching mechanic and grapple ability well. I probably would've bought this game in the current winter sale if not for my backlog ballooning from free games over the past couple months.
A promising platformer, though I'm a bit concerned about its approach to puzzle elements since the hub area at the demo's end has a blocked off area that is NOT opened by pushing switches that correspond to the three numbers a few levels prior.
The graphics can make it kinda hard to tell what's where, and the jumping mechanic is a bit too physics-based, but if you can get past that, the demo isn't too bad.
A simple platformer (so simple that you always jump the same height no matter how long you hold the jump button), but it has a fair bit of challenge in it. I did have some trouble when trying to wall jump away from walls, though.
An okay platformer where you can also rotate the room 90 degrees. The only "puzzle" elements are the fact that everything is monochrome, so you'll sometimes have to look around for a bit to figure out where the safe spots will be after rotating the room.
Almost skipped this one because the mouse-over preview didn't show any actual platforming; I had to click it to open its store page and watch the full trailer to see that. This one lets you flip gravity, even in midair after jumping, but you have to collect an item to flip gravity again before landing. No enemies, but it does have moving spikes, which might make it too dynamic to be a pure Celeste clone, but the full game could still easily head down that road anyway. Also, the intro scene is kinda slow.
A decent first-person 3D platformer, though I'm not too keen on the standard running mechanic being replaced by bunny-hopping; it's kinda gimmicky and doesn't exactly improve the experience. Also, I'm pretty sure the game never tells you that you can double-jump, which changes things.
A Metroidvania with level design that can be a bit too simple at times, but it shows promise and the boss is okay. Plus, it has some good humor.
An okay 3D collectathon. Something neat it does that I haven't seen another game do is that you can simply walk away from NPCs mid conversation to cut the cutscene early, but if you talk to them again, it picks up right where you left off. Unfortunately, this means if there are enemies nearby that you didn't notice, you can get attacked mid-conversation and end up missing that line until you manually finish the cutscene and talk to the NPC again. Also, you don't actually get the ability to collect the Stamps until you bypass seven of them and speak to the postmaster.
Level design is kinda flat with the occasional cheap pitfall trap, but is otherwise not too bad. Enemies can be damage sponges, but the only time I remember having to fight one was the world 1 boss, so you can just jump over the rest. I didn't like how the optional level in world 1 was just a harder version of the world 1 boss, though, so I skipped that level. It was also kinda annoying having to backtrack to that one NPC each time you pick up a single mana globule for the first few levels, but the levels themselves are designed so that you never have to do too much backtracking as a result of this mechanic (such as how the NPC in question shows up again in later parts of each level).
A solid 3D platformer where you can only perform your 3d-Sonic-the-Hedgehog-style homing dash attack by pushing the correct button in rhythm. Only things I didn't like was that level 3 could sometimes be a bit confusing as to where you needed to go, and the boss makes you wait 8 seconds between each of its six phases, which is too much waiting. Hopefully, at least that last one will be fixed in an update.
Although many rooms make you kill all enemies to open the door to the next room, the game is still fast-paced and fluid since all enemies die in one hit and you attack by dashing (which can be done in multiple directions, not just horizontally). Disappointingly, it ends in a chase sequence instead of a boss, and the chase itself is kinda long and easy, but the demo is still pretty fun overall.
Tapping the jump button keeps you flying upward, but you have limited stamina and no stamina meter to show exactly how much is left, just your character flashing red when it gets low. Level design is decent, but some levels can go on for too long without a checkpoint. The boss is also a notable drop in difficulty.
A 10 Second Ninja clone. Moment-to-moment gameplay is responsive and fast paced, but end-of-level rankings could be streamlined a bit, and there's no full-level preview before starting a level.
Fast-paced momentum platformer where you can shoot away from the direction you're moving to boost your momentum further (no enemies to shoot at, IIRC). Sometimes, you end up moving too fast to have time to react to what's coming, but levels are short and respawns are quick, so it's not too big a problem. Each world introduces a new gimmick, so the full game could end up being kinda gimmicky.
Yet another decent platformer. Some minor things every now and then didn't quite work, but it's pretty good overall.
Shoot-'em-Ups
Not as many this time; did I forget to check a tag or something?
I can't help but feel that the full game will be another one of those where you'll have to beat the whole game with a limited set of lives/continues. The demo is fine, though, even having short challenge missions that do save your progress on a level-by-level basis.
An okay Shmup, though the camera-twisting can be a bit disorienting. Bosses are designed around being not-damage-spongy when you don't have any bombs, but this also means they go down pretty quick if you even use just one bomb.
Another continue-limited Touhou clone. There's always a couple of these that show up each Next Fest, but unlike the demo for CORA, I actually made it to the end of this one instead of losing all my lives/continues and getting sent back to the beginning, so this is the demo that gets my recommendation. Still, the knowledge that this same thing could happen in the full game is what prevents me from buying them.
This game is basically a boss rush of Touhou-style bosses, but it makes each boss phase its own level, each death only makes you redo that specific phase/level, and clearing the phase saves your progress so you don't have to beat the game (or even that boss) in one sitting. There's even a stage select so you can retry specific phases without starting the game over, and you even get a different-colored stamp if you beat a phase without using your equipped defensive item. Plus, it has quite a bit of content for a free demo. Heck, the different difficulties are actually meaningfully different with alternate shot patterns instead of just giving the bosses more HP or making them faster! Sure, the whole game is just boss phases instead of having any normal Shmup/Bullet-Hell levels, but ever since I realized how so many Shmups are stuck with that outdated 1980s mentality of limiting lives/continues and forcing a total restart if you lose them all, I'll always praise a Shmup that does the bare minimum of having proper save points.
Still, as much as I like this demo, there are some downsides. First, each world (or "day" as the game calls them) ends with a level that just makes you go through all the world's individual-phase levels in a row, defeating the entire reason why I like the game. Thankfully, though, those levels are optional, at least in the demo (in fact, you don't even have to beat all the individual-phase levels to unlock the next world). Next, the difficulty starts at easy, and although the banner at the bottom says to push L+B to change the difficulty, this doesn't work. I played through almost the entire demo on Easy before I finally figured out how you actually change the difficulty: hold LB and push RT! The game is well-made enough that I still replayed on increasingly higher difficulties and mostly enjoyed my time doing so, but I started noticing some cracks in the facade as I did: when replaying on Normal, I noticed that bosses would often have more health than they needed, so the bullet pattern would loop multiple times and start getting repetitive before they finally went down. On Hard, I noticed that the game freezing on death doesn't actually help you figure out what killed you like I initially thought because not only does the game keep going for a split second after death before freezing (so you can end up overlayed on a completely different bullet and get mislead on how you died), but the specific bullet that kills you DISAPPEARS! I like challenge, but being able to figure out where I went wrong on death is kinda crucial to make the challenge enjoyable. Finally, on Lunatic difficulty, I figured out the real reason the bullet hell genre is so notoriously difficult to get into: the small light on your character that indicates the location of your hitbox…doesn't indicate the size of your hitbox, which is actually way smaller than even that small circle. There isn't even a smaller circle within it to indicate your actual hitbox's size; you just kinda have to figure that out yourself while getting swarmed with bullets whose gaps are less than 1/6th the width of your already-small hitbox indicator. Between this and the issues I noticed in previous difficulties, there were three phases I just gave up on in Lunatic difficulty (1-6, 2-5, and 3-6).
That said, I still highly recommend playing this demo on Easy or Normal, at least.
The moment-to-moment gameplay is pretty good, except for that one part where I had to fight a bunch of sheep while surrounded by TVs; that part was repetitive and boring. I'm also not too keen on the fact that it's a roguelite, but it has a precursor that's a normal twinstick, and that game's demo is also pretty good (though its levels always loop before you can get enough gems to progress).
EDIT: Almost forgot to mention the demo for Fox Flare Night which is another pretty fun Shmup that saves your progress after each level and whose levels are meaningfully different between difficulties. There’s also a shop you can buy power-ups from.
Puzzle & Tactics
Starting to fall out of favor with the puzzle genre, but I found a few I still liked
The small early levels made me think I could only move pipes one space at a time, but once I realized that wasn't the case, I had some fun.
The sequel to Cosmic Express that also improves on it since while it still has a new mechanic in each world along with a generally low difficulty, previous worlds' mechanics continue to be used in later worlds. Also, there were a few pretty tricky puzzles in the demo, so it's an improvement on that front as well.
This is one of those games where you have to navigate a level using a Chess knight's movements. I can definitely see the subgenre getting old if you've played a bunch of them already, but for this one in particular, I found it to have decently tricky puzzles without getting too obtuse too quickly.
This one has some tricky puzzles, but it can also be gimmicky at times, which doesn't bode well for the full game.
An Advance Wars clone where you can buy and customize special units in advance, then take one or two with you into missions (you can't buy more during missions like you can with regular units). If a special unit gets defeated, it's unavailable for a few missions.
Despite visual similarities to the GBA Fire Emblem games, this one does NOT have hit-chances, which automatically makes its gameplay better. It does have dice that can give you or the enemy +1 ATK/DEF, so there is still a bit of randomness, unfortunately. It also has this weird turn-order system where you can pick any one of your units to move, but after moving that one, one of the enemies gets to move, and then you pick one of your unmoved units, and the cycle keeps going until all of one side has moved, at which point the other side gets to move all the rest of its units one after the other; only then does the turn end and both sides get access to all their units again. Also, the grass biome has some tiles that looked walkable but were actually walls, which annoyed me.
Etc.
Not enough for their own genre-specific spoiler
A hybrid Hack 'n' Slash/Shmup, not unlike Nier, though I feel this demo is a bit heavier on the hack 'n' slash side of things (projectiles don't really show up outside the tutorial and the one boss fight). There's also a bit of platforming, but the jumping controls felt kinda off.
This one's not technically a twin-stick shooter since you have to go pick up your dice before you can throw it again to attack enemies, but it is a roguelite, which is always frustrating. Still, I had some fun with it, and if you like card games, it also includes a slight variation on Solitaire, completely optional and separate from the main game.
A Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker clone. The boss is annoying since there are moments where it'll abruptly become invulnerable so it can slowly hop to the center and do a scripted attack that takes too long, but the rest of the demo is okay.
Also like before, I still encourage you to check out the Next Fests yourself–not just because some demos get removed after Next Fest is over, but because some of the best games end up being really obscure ones that you’ll never hear about otherwise.
October 2025 report
Beaten Crisis Core for the second time, now all that remains is the hard difficulty. ^_^ Completed Yuppie Psycho in one session for the last achievement! Excellent game, can only recommend. <3
Still struggling with the Avernum on Torment… but it’s slightly getting better!
Enough of small talk, and now to the actual assassinations! Good luck in the new month and enjoy your games!
Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition
⭐⭐⭐⭐💥Actually a very nice hidden object game! The story was enjoyable with a familiar feeling of well-known fairy tales. Both the puzzles and hidden object scenes were varied and of good quality. The backtracking isn't that apparent. There are in-game achievements and collectibles.
The bonus chapter is short and serves somehow as a sequel/prequel.
Also, you rescue a cute little lynx and keep it as your helpful companion - you can name it too!
Visual novel about a girl who gets to relive her last seven days to uncover the truth behind her death.
The game is set as a chamber drama with only four other characters, while one of them serves as narrator. During the seven days, we can visit our best friend, ex-boyfriend, or school doctor to learn more about our past. The choices we make influence our behaviour and through it the end we can get - good or evil. The true end opens after we acquire four items closely tied to our unfortunate future.
The art of characters and CGs is peculiar, strange-looking even, but at the same time, it has some appeal. The writing could be better, but as the story is pretty straightforward, it's not that problematic. Also, there are no happy endings. Japanese voices are a nice touch, although they are sometimes barely audible.
Even though it's an older visual novel and a little bit rough around the edges, I still enjoyed it - I may be biased as I played it maaaaaany years ago and have fond memories of it.
So, what to say and not to sound bitter… I came back to this game after almost 10 years - I put the game on hiatus in 2016. All I could remember about it was that it got rather hard… well, that was an understatement.
Road Not Taken is a roguelike puzzle game with charming visuals and frustratingly increasing difficulty. We play as a lone ranger rescuing lost children from a nearby forest after the end of every winter. The layout of the forest is randomly generated every year. The same goes for the number of children in need of rescue, the enemies, or puzzles. To successfully fulfill your duty, you need to bring home at least half of the missing children - especially helpful when the forest layout is extremely against you. The game ends when you survive for 15 years… then you die and start over as a new ranger.
There isn't much of a story to tell about… the whole game is concentrated on the children and how they bring joy and higher meaning to our lives… which is all true, but after a few hours of the same lines on this theme, it gets pretty boring. We can build a relationship with some of the villagers, and if everything goes right, i.e. we bring them what they like and don't court someone they don't like, we can even marry them. There is no real benefit in it though (except for an achievement) - they will live in your home and cry at your grave longer than others.
But getting friendly with everyone is a great way to gain items or knowledge about the forest, so go for it!
The gameplay in its core is quite simple - you need to navigate the "maze", find the children, and bring them to their parents (or the other way around). To progress, you need to open the rooms by bringing the required items to one pile - for example four trees, five stones, six moles… you do that by grabbing the item and throwing it where you want it - that's the ideal solution. There is a catch though - most of the items interact together (an axe thrown at a tree will create a log; two logs will create a fire; etc.), so you need to be extra careful what you lift up because you can't put it down! Some items can hurt you when you touch them, some animals can hurt you when getting close to them, some enemies will hunt you around the room and you can do nothing about them… with every year the amount of items in the room increases and as there are hundreds of combinations you can easily get into trouble by basically soft-locking yourself from progressing in the room.
The first five years are fun! Then the difficulty gets wild - the rooms are cluttered with items, sometimes there is basically no chance of moving without wasting half of your life energy on clearing the room, which is pointless, as you want to keep as much energy as you can because the next year you receive an addition of about 40% of the ending amount.
The game quickly turned from enjoyable to frustrating. There are too many item combinations that you are quickly overwhelmed by them. Collected items and buffs don't offer any serious advantage to make navigating the forest any easier. You can play the game on normal (which is apparently an easy mode) or on hard - considering how some of the rooms were almost unplayable on "easy", I can't even imagine what the hard difficulty looks like. Getting all of the achievements requires quite a lot of dedication and time.
Freshly started
Continuing
Dec 25 2025
25 December 2025
Not gonna finish this one. First, PvP achievements. Second, the textures make it difficult to differentiate between walls / obstacles / empty space which is essential for this type of game. Third, not really my most liked genre.
Dec 24 2025
Late (or early?) candy treat
Another short game for the holidays time, and one that's kind of fitting in theme, too. A bit late for Halloween sure, but there's more than a few references to Christmas here, so that's fun
Pumpkin Jack is a 3D platformer in the classic (mascot) style, although modernised a touch, and quite a bit shorter. Just six levels, with a boss at the end of each. You'll be pretty much jumping on platforms the whole way, smashing enemies sometimes, and occasionally performing the odd one-off mini-game or puzzle
Narrative is simple and forgettable; visuals and sound are pleasing but straightforward; nearly every aspect of this game is well-done, but also basically washes past you, kind of like a sweet treat - i know i just enjoyed it, yet i feel a bit.. unfulfilled
But if you go into it expecting the short fun, candy-coated ride that it is, you'll have a good time



















































































