Also On: PS4, PC
Publisher: The Domaginarium
Developer: The Domaginarium
Medium: Digital
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: E10+
While there are lots of ways for point-and-click adventure games to distinguish themselves, as a baseline, they absolutely must to do two things well at a bare minimum: make it easy to point at objects, and make it easy to click on objects. I mean, itโs right there in the genreโs name; if a game fails at either of those facets, thereโs really not much else to say about it.
And, hey, what do you know: The Dreamlands: Aislingโs Quest is pretty bad at both pointing and clicking.
To be sure, there are other things at which Aislingโs Quest doesnโt exactly excel. Most obviously, itโs pretty ugly, with graphics that look like they were lifted straight out of a mid-tier PS2 game. Thereโs also a story thatโs not nearly enough to sustain a playerโs interest over the course of a game โ which is particularly bad when you consider that the whole thing can easily be beaten in under an hour.
But at its core, Aislingโs Quest fails because it makes it difficult for players to perform the most basic of tasks. It doesnโt explain anything, forcing you to touch blindly around the screen, hoping to trigger something new. On top of that, even when you touch the right spot, it doesnโt always respond, usually taking several taps before anything happens. It wasnโt uncommon for me to have to click something, click back out of the scene, and then click back in with the hopes that a second or third try would be the one that finally worked.
The worst part of the previous paragraph is that youโd think that the Vitaโs touchscreen would actually lend itself to point-and-click adventure. After all, it works for every other adventure game Iโve played on the system. Yet, for whatever reason, Aislingโs Quest is finicky, which makes it impossible to enjoy the game.
Unsurprisingly, thereโs a direct correlation between game not working properly and me not liking it. I can overlook outdated graphics, and I can overlook a mediocre plot. But when a game just doesnโt function โ and make no mistake, The Dreamlands: Aislingโs Quest doesnโt โ thatโs simply unforgivable.
The Domaginarium provided us with a The Dreamlands: Aislingโs Quest PS Vita code for review purposes.