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Gobliiins 4 header image
review: Gobliiins 4
Pros
Challenging “dream-logical” puzzles; surreal, colorful environments; varied, pleasing music; immense charm and quirky humor.
Cons
Outdated 3D graphics (I miss you, sprites!); some items and techniques feel overused.
Verdict
4 stars out of 5
About This Score »

As charming as it is bizarre, Gobliiins 4 is a quality throwback to the beloved twisted humor and weird puzzles of the original games, and one of the most likeable titles this year.


When rumors of Gobliiins 4 first began circulating, I half-expected it to be a joke, or at least nothing more than wishful thinking from a devoted niche. The odd, humorous series by French developer Coktel Vision was impressive in its day, but it’s been fifteen years since the last game, and even its biggest fans must have doubted the possibility of a resurrection after all this time. Especially since they aren’t even typical adventure games, but rather a slapstick, escape-the-room style puzzle experience with light story elements, something often frowned upon by genre veterans. Still, the series is fondly remembered by those who played the originals. They had a unique charm, they were funny, and their bizarre puzzles were fully absorbing, and the years have done little to quell the desire for more goblin adventures.

Much to my delight, the news of a sequel was no joke at all, and better yet, it has proven to be arguably the best game in the series to date. Spared of the license limbo afflicting so many older series, this latest installment was developed by Société Pollene and produced by a Russian company, Snowberry Connection, but series creator Pierre Gilhodes was back at the helm, ensuring the new game shares the same Gobliiins style that fans have come to love. For newcomers, yes, this new iteration is still decidedly puzzle-based, but Gobliiins 4 gives you plenty of reasons to care about the surreal world in which you’ve been placed, even if it’s just to see the next gag, creature or contraption. Whatever your motivation, this title is a treat, and you’ll find yourself soon wrapped up in the challenging but addictive puzzles and the comical interactions of the goblins.

The previous games have varied their approaches to puzzling, as well as the number of playable characters (which, cutely, are represented by the number of i’s in the title). The original Gobliiins had the right dynamic (three goblins for maximum mischief, single screens), but there was an unnecessary health meter that punished you for missteps in a largely trial-and-error adventure. The second title, Gobliins 2, featured (you guessed it) two goblins and no more health bar. Although the goblins could move simultaneously, their antics were toned down with one fewer member, and you occasionally had to traverse multiple screens to solve puzzles. Goblins Quest 3, published by Sierra, was mostly a lone goblin affair, aside from picking up sidekicks to help with puzzles. While a worthwhile game in many respects, it didn’t have the tight-knit, focused feel of the original, and consequently felt too much like a meandering King’s Quest game than a unique Gobliiins title.

Gobliiins 4 represents the best of all worlds. Here Gilhodes has used what worked in Gobliiins (one): a motley cast of three clumsy yet plucky goblins, weird worlds to explore one screen at a time, and a wide assortment of devious puzzles—but this time without the cruel health bar. There is no way to permanently mess things up in a level, meaning restarts are unnecessary. And, like Gobliins 2, characters can move at the same time, working together to solve the problems facing them. On top of that, each level in Gobliiins 4 has a distinct, clear goal, which other games in the series rarely had.

While perhaps streamlined a little too much for some, this format greatly eases potential frustration and boredom. My own biggest draw to the adventure genre is the pacing. It’s often ponderous, almost meditative. Even when inevitably getting “stuck”, I’m mellowed out enough at that point from carefully exploring environments to handle the situation with a certain thoughtful clarity. And yet there’s nothing worse than walking back through dozens of screens with little idea of where to go or even what to look for. So it’s to this sense of pace that I can attribute to a good chunk of my love for Gobliiins 4. By keeping things toned down to easily digestible single-screen puzzle scenarios, the game provides some of the most manageable yet challenging experiences in any adventure game.

One feature the Gobliiins series never featured prominently was story, and it’s true that Gobliiins 4 is equally short on plot, which is advanced only by short comic-style panels between the self-contained chapters. The game is free of introductory cinematics and narrative cutscenes, but the premise involves helping the King Balderone find his missing aardvark Riri… only to get caught up in plenty of obstacles along the way. The first challenge is merely gathering your busy cohorts for the King’s mission, but once together, the trio land themselves in such predicaments as spider-friendly dark tunnels, a field of singing “foolweeds”, and even on other planets. The lack of story is never a distraction, as it keeps the focus squarely on the puzzles themselves, and yet throughout this very weird tangent of odd, distracting missions, you’ll always feel like there’s a good reason for your actions.

Upon starting the game, you’ll find that the opening menu screen serves as a tutorial. It looks exactly like one of the levels you’ll be playing, only there’s no real goal, and clicking on items will give you a brief primer on how to control the goblins. Moving the three heroes around is easy to do, and to complete puzzles it’s necessary to utilize each goblin’s distinct shtick: detective Tchoup is the only one who can pick up and use items as inventory, Perluis the wizard can bring things to life with magic, while Stucco the Viking possesses brute strength. The opening two stages are played with one and two goblins, respectively, introducing each character’s abilities and easing players into the more complex task-sharing of the later levels.

It isn’t always easy to know which goblin to choose (or what to do with whomever you select), but there’s a certain sense to these puzzles once connections are made. Some might call Gobliiins 4’s puzzles illogical, but really they just rely on "dream-logic", requiring you to get into the goblin world mindset to understand. That’s not to say you won’t experience some trial-and-error or tedious pixel-hunting; there’s a little bit of both. But mostly you’ll have an idea of what needs to be done: in one stage, you’ll simply need to punch a ticket… but in this game, of course, you won’t do it with anything you’d expect. The game encourages you to think creatively, and never punishes you for mistakes.


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Where to Buy [affiliate links]
Gobliiins 4 is available for direct download from GOG
Legal & full downloads - available internationally
Burn a backup copy or download again

Gobliiins 4 is available at Amazon


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