![]() I could easily see the backgrounds framed and hanging on a wall, imploring viewers to lose time in their elaborate filigree. The minute details of each scene craft a believable world I wish I could explore in high definition - the quality of the art goes beyond a depth most games offer. Overall, the effect is rather like an animated storybook, albeit a storybook for a very, very twisted child.When I first saw screenshots of Tormentum, I was highly impressed by its brooding darkness and warped reality, a wonderful painted combination of surreal, gothic landscapes and characters. There are many dynamic elements to the game-most notably a torture scene where a knight repeatedly stabs a prisoner with spikes-that keep it from feeling too static. That the character doesn't move around the screen might be seen as detrimental, but it does eliminate the tedium of watching your character slowly walk back and forth as you click your way across a puzzle. But just because it's weird doesn't mean it's not gorgeous-the artwork in this game is stunning, if largely static, and will often leave you staring at the screen slack-jawed. Giger will see some strong similarities between Tormentum and the artist's weird, biomechanical humans, as well as Zdzisław Beksiński's somewhat disturbing post-apocalyptic landscapes. To put it simply, Tormentum is one of the most beautiful point-and-click adventure games in existence. Tormentum's Art is Breathtaking, If Mostly Static While it does occasionally stray into Linkin Park-esque angst, the creatures, characters, and scenery of Tormentum are vivid and memorable, weighing players down with titular, dark sorrow. It's hard to explain exactly what the world of Tormentum is like-it's a vivid hellscape of torture, pain, and anguish, but it is also strangely beautiful in its artistry and inventiveness. It's pretty easy to tell the "bad" decisions from the "good" ones, though the game does make a point of explaining that the character can't know if they made the right decision in the long run. Though point-and-click adventures might be thought of as appropriate for younger audiences, that's definitely not true of this game it's dark from beginning to end, forcing the player character to make some chilling moral decisions. Tormentum is dark fantasy-the game is rife with images of graphic torture and a perpetual air of sadness and hopelessness lingers throughout. Along the way, you meet a variety of other characters-other prisoners, a jester, talking trees, and reptiles-and must complete a series of challenges to advance the story. The game doesn't provide you with much information other than that you're a depraved criminal who has committed an unnamed crime. You play as some kind of hooded figure, and you're immediately dropped into a prison from which you must escape. Like most adventure games, Tormentum is a 'story first, action second' kind of game. ![]() Despite Some Emotional Hiccups, Tormentum's Story is Wonderfully Warped Giger and Zdzisław Beksiński, Tormentum – Dark Sorrow is a dark and otherworldly look at hells both universal and personal. ![]() ![]() Thanks to a successful Indiegogo campaign fronted by developer OhNoo, this beautiful, twisted point-and-click adventure is gracing the screens of PC and Mac users. Adventure games aren't dead, and Tormentum – Dark Sorrow is determined to prove it. ![]()
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