Tunic is a beautiful game, both visually and mechanically, and very worth playing.
It’s basically a modern recreation of how it would feel if you were a 10-year-old kid in the year 1984, and your Dad comes home from a business trip to Japan with a brand new Nintendo Entertainment System, not yet released outside Japan, and a copy of The Legend of Zelda, fully in Japanese.
Of course, you don’t speak any Japanese, and the Internet isn’t a thing. But you have this amazing console and amazing game and you’re surely going to play it no matter what.
For anyone nostalgic about video game manuals, I’d recommend the game Tunic and going into it as blind as possible.
Tunic is a beautiful game, both visually and mechanically, and very worth playing.
It’s basically a modern recreation of how it would feel if you were a 10-year-old kid in the year 1984, and your Dad comes home from a business trip to Japan with a brand new Nintendo Entertainment System, not yet released outside Japan, and a copy of The Legend of Zelda, fully in Japanese.
Of course, you don’t speak any Japanese, and the Internet isn’t a thing. But you have this amazing console and amazing game and you’re surely going to play it no matter what.
That’s Tunic.