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Artifex Mundi have once again branched out from a lot of their hidden object games, to give us a satirical point and click adventure with Irony Curtain: From Matryoshka with Love.

The game is set in an alternate reality, so it's not tied to any real history so it's able to play with the setting. Artifex Mundi said it's inspired by the classics, while not requiring you to hunt down pixels. It's also fully voiced in English, with subtitles in Polish and German.

Note: Key provided by the developer to our Steam Curator, go give us a follow it helps!

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Features:

  • The Spy Intrigue – sleeper spies, stolen secrets and world-domination plots wrapped up in layers of humor.
  • Quirky characters – Meet the mysterious Leader ruling Matryoshka with an irony fist, the clueless and guilible Evan, the brave and witty Agent Anna and the notorious Minister of Propaganda...
  • Do it your way – some of the puzzles are non-linear and can be solved in two or more different ways.
  • 21 hand-painted locations – that look surprisingly better than their original inspirations. 
  • 1,951 cleverly sneaked-in easter eggs – some of them punishable by political imprisonment.
  • Music score as grand as Matryoshka itself - music by the state composer Arkadiusz Reikowski (Layers of Fear, My Brother Rabbit) with Main Theme by Peter McConnell (Monkey Island, Grim Fandango)

The Linux version seems to run nicely and it does have some great artwork, which I've come to expect from Artifex Mundi as they usually look fantastic. The voice-over and music work is equally good, although at times the voice-over volume even on max was a little too below the others making it hard to hear, sometimes it seemed the music slider wasn't quite doing its job so that may be a bug there.

The game is more than a little absurd a lot of the time and if you do enjoy a quirky adventure this might be for you. Some of it's a little confusing though, although the puzzles are mostly pretty streamlined. The setting is very odd, didn't quite hook me to be honest but I wouldn't say it was a bad game just not a setting I personally enjoyed.

You can pick up a copy of Irony Curtain: From Matryoshka with Love from GOG and Steam.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly came back to check on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly. Find me on Mastodon.
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2 comments

Eike May 17, 2019
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Sounds good to me!
Anybody else gave it a try and can comment on it?
kaiman May 19, 2019
QuoteThe game is more than a little absurd a lot of the time [...]. Some of it's a little confusing though, although the puzzles are mostly pretty streamlined.
Played the first two chapters and that description sums it up nicely.

Looking at the purely technical aspects, there's nothing to complain about. I like the highly detailed, high resolution graphics and the art style. The story is also set up quite nicely, but then it takes a big dive. Dialogue is rather uninspired and not funny, which is doubly disappointing after being captivated by the subtle humour on display on their official website.

The overall writing isn't too compelling either: there's actually a lot going on in some of the scenes, but it all feels pretty much detached from our protagonist and our actions. That highly contributes to the aforementioned absurdity, but it feels more perplexing than hilarious.

In my view, that's its biggest design flaw: the absurd is not a direct consequence of what the player does, but a mere backdrop for a series of puzzles that will get you to the next screen. I mean,
Spoiler, click me
cooking turkey while the house is being raided by capitalist government agents!
Seriously!?


Last edited by kaiman on 19 May 2019 at 10:11 am UTC
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