The Dreamlands: Aislingโ€™s Quest review for PS Vita, PS4

Platform: PS Vita
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, itโ€™s right there in the genreโ€™s name; if a game fails at either of those facets, thereโ€™s really not much else to say about it.

And, hey, what do you know: The Dreamlands: Aislingโ€™s Quest is pretty bad at both pointing and clicking.

To be sure, there are other things at which Aislingโ€™s Quest doesnโ€™t exactly excel. Most obviously, itโ€™s pretty ugly, with graphics that look like they were lifted straight out of a mid-tier PS2 game. Thereโ€™s also a story thatโ€™s not nearly enough to sustain a playerโ€™s 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, Aislingโ€™s Quest fails because it makes it difficult for players to perform the most basic of tasks. It doesnโ€™t 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 doesnโ€™t always respond, usually taking several taps before anything happens. It wasnโ€™t 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 youโ€™d think that the Vitaโ€™s touchscreen would actually lend itself to point-and-click adventure. After all, it works for every other adventure game Iโ€™ve played on the system. Yet, for whatever reason, Aislingโ€™s Quest is finicky, which makes it impossible to enjoy the game.

Unsurprisingly, thereโ€™s 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 I can overlook outdated graphics, and I can overlook a mediocre plot.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 doesnโ€™t function โ€” and make no mistake, The Dreamlands: Aislingโ€™s Quest doesnโ€™t โ€” thatโ€™s simply unforgivable.

The Domaginarium provided us with a The Dreamlands: Aislingโ€™s Quest PS Vita code for review purposes.

Grade: D
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