Loom may not exactly be obscure by any standard, but I don’t see it being mentioned nearly as much as, say, Day of the Tentacle or Monkey Island. But it was a truly revolutionary way of reimagining the adventure game genre, and in a very early age of point-and-click. No inventory, single mouse click interaction, using spells to interact with the environment…

Of course, you’ll want to play the original floppy version to get the full story; the CD-ROM version had its dialogue heavily truncated to fit onto the CD.

What’s your pick?

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4 points

I’ve played this game not expecting much and thinking it would be so dumb that I would end up playing it for a few minutes. In the end I completed this game in a couple of days, got stuck a few times on some of the puzzles, and quite enjoyed it. It’s not the best game ever made for sure, but it’s not a bad game. It’s challenging at times and the jokes are funny (for the time period). I would recommend this game if you don’t jump in it expecting a masterpiece.

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2 points

That’s cool, I’ll play it sometime, sounds like it will be fun since I’m already not overhyping it

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2 points

I loved Toonstruck. Christopher Lloyd being in it had me hooked before even booting it up, but it’s a solid adventure. Not to mention the voice cast is phenomenal! Tim Curry is the main antagonist and Dan Castellaneta (Homer Simpson) is your sidekick Flux!

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A community for fans, devs, and general aficionados of the adventure game genre. This includes IF/parser games, point-and-click games, puzzle games, walking simulators, and whatever else you want to call these. To us, they’re simply adventure games.

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