Limbo Free Download Pc game
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Limbo
You
are a boy searching for his missing sister. You wander through gloomy
forests, explore forbidding caves and try to escape a industrial complex
of whirring machines and smoke stacks – all painted in silhouette
against the smoky greys of an old flickering film. It’s amazing that
such a simple approach can create such a nightmarish atmosphere.
‘Simple’ is an excellent word to sum up this indie platform game. From its monochrome presentation to its single sentence storyline, it creates a spare, deadly, lonely world, devoid of colour and distraction. You brave yawning landscapes with nothing but the rustling of your feet to keep you company. Large sections of the game are silent but for the occasional drip of water, or a cavernous echo, sometimes punctuated by fractured, urgent music, or footsteps racing into the distance. The only humans you come up against are hostile, chasing you away with spears and darts.
‘Simple’ is an excellent word to sum up this indie platform game. From its monochrome presentation to its single sentence storyline, it creates a spare, deadly, lonely world, devoid of colour and distraction. You brave yawning landscapes with nothing but the rustling of your feet to keep you company. Large sections of the game are silent but for the occasional drip of water, or a cavernous echo, sometimes punctuated by fractured, urgent music, or footsteps racing into the distance. The only humans you come up against are hostile, chasing you away with spears and darts.
Everything
in Limbo is out to harm you. From the moment the scenery come to life
when that first giant spider-leg unfurls, a hundred times more menacing
than it has any right to be, you’re in world that doesn’t want you
there.
It’s
a meat grinder, coldly snapping beartraps around your fragile little
frame, crumbling the boy into a pile of body parts. It stresses you into
making mistakes: you know exactly what horrible thing is about to
happen to your little ward when presented with a pressure plate and a
crushing device.
Limbo’s
obstructions are grossly imaginative, requiring morbid solutions: one
puzzle’s resolution comes when you drag a corpse into a pool so you can
use it as a bloated, floppy stepping stone to the other side. When not
being chased by implacable spiders with a penchant for skewering bodies,
you’ll be feverishly searching for floating crates to ride as water
rises above your ankles, or plucking the remaining leg off a maimed
spider and rolling its body to block spikes and clamber to a ledge.
Limbo’s
initial morbid world of beartraps, corpses and ravenous arachnids
eventually leads you into industrial levels, full of more conventional
puzzles, such as gravity switches, elevators and even machinegun
turrets. It’s around this mark that the puzzles become far more
frustrating, requiring precision timing to progress. You’ll occasionally
be reduced to a weeping mess of tears and tantrums, defeated by a
straightforward but deadly puzzle that can only be overcome by getting
everything just so.
I
spent a lip-gnashing, keyboard smashing 20 minutes trying to run across
a length of railway track before a descending minecart hit a switch to
electrify the rails. Twenty damn minutes watching my boy judder as his
tiny legs failed to make the last jump.
Your
most horrific foes are the brain slugs, which drop from above and
burrow into your skull. Once nestled in your cranium, they force you to
stagger in one direction – normally straight into a pit of spikes.
Make
no mistake: you’re going to die. A lot. It’s impossible to pass five
minutes without succumbing to Limbo’s sick snags. But finally realising
the infuriatingly simple solutions and achieving that bloody jump will
reward you with Portalsized feelings of smugness and relief.
File Size : 80MB