


This is where LucasArts legends Ron Gilbert and Tim Schafer were in their prime, so laughs are guaranteed. Would it ever occur to you to use a banana on a metronome to distract and kidnap a piano-playing monkey and then use it as a “monkey wrench” to close a waterfall’s shut-off valve? If not, then you may have trouble adjusting to Monkey Island 2’s preposterous-yet-amusing leaps in logic. Once the striking presentation settles in, you’re faced with a convoluted cornucopia of puzzles. This game is so colorful and well put together that you’ll either thank yourself for returning to the island or kick yourself for having missed the boat in the first place. The Monkey Island voice cast returns as well, delivering a wealth of witty lines and fleshed out personalities. The shiny new look can still be swapped out with old school pixelation on the fly. It refines the beautiful, cartoonish art style, while characters benefit from richer animations. LucasArts may have remade this game’s predecessor in 2008, but LeChuck’s Revenge ups the ante. The entertaining quest involves voodoo dolls, spitting contests, cross-dressing, and tons of Indiana Jones and Star Wars references. This adventure follows the incompetent, sarcastic, endearing swashbuckler as he searches for pieces of a map to Big Whoop’s treasure, while evading his foe. So how does a quirky title like LeChuck’s Revenge hold up against time and testosterone-fueled shooters? Quite well, actually.Īs the game’s name implies, protagonist Guybrush Threepwood didn’t exactly succeed in killing The Ghost Pirate LeChuck in The Secret of Monkey Island. Adventure games like LucasArts’ Monkey Island 2: LeChuck’s Revenge challenged players with mind-bending puzzles rather than skull-shredding bullets, and rewarded them with unprecedented cleverness instead of swollen kill counts.
#The secret of monkey island review Pc#
Long before gamers began aiming and shooting with their PC mice they were pointing and clicking.
