![]() ![]() ![]() They include stronger combat, health and agility which can be purchased with your coins. Upgrades and cosmetics can be purchased from vendors that you find along your journey. The stones, even with the upgrade of “extra slingshot projection” would land helplessly near my feet. I eventually found out how, but its mechanics were lacklustre. ![]() However, when I purchased it, the game didn’t tell me how to use it. I saved up my hard-earned coins to get a weapon I really wanted, the slingshot. They always hold coins of different amounts depending on how hard it is to find them. Other objects that are scattered around, such as chests, were fun to discover. This became tiresome and not at all fun, so I sprinted through them to get to where I was going to avoid repetitive gameplay. What I wasn’t a fan of is that when you entered the same area, the exact same enemies respawned in the exact same locations. There’s also a cool counterattack move that leaves enemies stunned so you can do extra damage. Combat is easy, with two to three whacks of your sword being enough to fell most baddies. The “double jump” feature is especially cool and gets you to super hard to reach places. I found myself running around in circles quite a bit. Open up the regional map does reveal waypoints, but its flat pixelated form makes it hard to know exactly which way is the correct way to go. I also found myself saying, “where the hell am I supposed to go next?!” as the objectives never tell you exactly where you should be headed. The game’s lack of instructions made my experience with it a tad frustrating and more than once I found myself muttering “what the hell am I supposed to do with this?!” It was only later on that I found it was a key to a boss battle room. I would also receive objects and have no idea what they were to be used for, such as a weird jet pack looking thing. ![]() It meant I was stuck on puzzles for a lot longer than I should have been. What’s tricky about these puzzles however is that there are no instructions on how to use the seasons or objects around you to better aid Ary. If there are ruins around, you can activate a season within them and the seasonal powers reach will become greater. For example, you can use the season of winter to flood a certain area, which will let her swim to higher platforms. They are filled with puzzles that need Ary’s seasonal powers to be solved. These dungeons were super fun and challenging. You can cast all the seasons at once, which is nifty for puzzle dungeons. I kept on wandering around experimenting to see how Ary’s seasonal powers could aid me in my journey. These seasonal abilities are super cool and are a puzzle in themselves. For example, melting ice with the power of summer to access hidden passages and creating floating icicles that can be jumped on to reach higher platforms. The seasons let you change the environment into the season of your choice. You start off with only winter at your fingertips, but as the game progresses, you will also get the power of summer, autumn and spring. So not only are you tasked with finding your big bro, but you also now need to find the secret behind these strange seasonal changes. On her journey, she finds that the seasons have gone all haywire, with the regions experiencing weather they never have before. She also takes along her father’s “borrowed” winter stone and her brother’s sword to aid her. Ary obviously doesn’t listen and pulls a Mulan: She chops off her long locks, puts on her brother’s clothes, and heads off to find her brother. Though her mother insists she will do no such thing, seeing as the position of Guardian is reserved for men. Ary and her mother go along their daily routine until Ary gets into a fight with a bunch of wild and wacky hyenas, and one of them just happens to have Flynn’s sword…Īry, being the headstrong badass she is, insists that she go along to the Guardian of the Seasons meeting her father will be missing due to his present state of mind. Her father, who is the Guardian of Winter, is in a deep depression due to this loss. You start your adventure in the world of Winter, Ary’s home, where you find that her brother, Flynn, has gone missing. Each world has a slightly different feel to the next, but reminds me a lot of ancient cities such as Japan (Winter), Greece (Summer) and Venice (the Prince’s castle) which gives the game a lovely old-worldy charm to it. This action-adventure 3D platformer is set in the land of Valdi and is sectioned off into four towns that each represent the four seasons. A small girl named Ary taking over her father’s place as the Guardian of Winter and in doing so, totally sticking it to patriarchal traditions? Hell yeah, count me in! When I first watch the trailer for Ary and the Secret of the Seasons my first reaction was that the game looked hella cute. ![]()
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