COMPLETE: Dokkiri God Evasion
Jan. 1st, 2020 11:39 pmThis game is not even a little in English, so I'm just taking my best guess at a title based on the Google translation.
So, what we have here is another one of those Japanese "click on things and solve puzzles to get the young child protagonist through the situation safely" games, like the Hidden my game by mom series. The main differences that this one has are:
1) Different developers
2) Rather than trying to finding a hidden game (by mom) every level, this is about... all sorts of random wacky situations. Bake cookies, walk down the street without being pranked, steal a diamond, help your friend practice chopping a watermelon with a wooden sword blindfolded without getting smacked, you know, whatever the situation demands.
3) Rather than badly-translated Engrish, this one is just completely not in English at all. The good news is that everything is that it's a mostly text-free delivery where nothing is harder to follow what's going on than, say, Ouendan. The bad news is that you're completely out of luck if you get stuck, since that means you can't read the hints.
Basically, if you like the sort of wacky "did I just make two centaurs fall in love so that I could do my homework in peace" puzzle-clickies and you don't mind the utter lack of English, this one is cute and silly and entertaining. 30 levels + an Undertale-esque "dodge the end credits" sequence. That's fine. I feel like I'm ready for a different genre now after going through like four of these games in a row, but this was fun and it didn't overstay its welcome. It's a great companion to the Hidden games if you want to do something besides find your game.
So, what we have here is another one of those Japanese "click on things and solve puzzles to get the young child protagonist through the situation safely" games, like the Hidden my game by mom series. The main differences that this one has are:
1) Different developers
2) Rather than trying to finding a hidden game (by mom) every level, this is about... all sorts of random wacky situations. Bake cookies, walk down the street without being pranked, steal a diamond, help your friend practice chopping a watermelon with a wooden sword blindfolded without getting smacked, you know, whatever the situation demands.
3) Rather than badly-translated Engrish, this one is just completely not in English at all. The good news is that everything is that it's a mostly text-free delivery where nothing is harder to follow what's going on than, say, Ouendan. The bad news is that you're completely out of luck if you get stuck, since that means you can't read the hints.
Basically, if you like the sort of wacky "did I just make two centaurs fall in love so that I could do my homework in peace" puzzle-clickies and you don't mind the utter lack of English, this one is cute and silly and entertaining. 30 levels + an Undertale-esque "dodge the end credits" sequence. That's fine. I feel like I'm ready for a different genre now after going through like four of these games in a row, but this was fun and it didn't overstay its welcome. It's a great companion to the Hidden games if you want to do something besides find your game.