The Longest Journey, a game series that lived up to its name
The Longest Journey takes apparently 17 years, because that is the time span between the release of the original game in 1999 and the last game of the series in 2016, which finally finished the story. The Longest Journey is a classic point and click adventure game, meaning it has a wonderful story and world but sometimes really, really, REALLY stupid puzzles. But luckily only sometimes, often they are both entertaining and brain teasing, but you should still keep a guide nearby to not get frustrated.
You mainly play as April Ryan, a college student in a low futuristic SciFi world. But as it turns out, there is not only one world, but two. There is Stark, where April and technology (as usual, mostly defined as electricity and higher) lives and Arcadia, the world where magic lives. And as it turns out, April is a shifter, somebody able to travel between the worlds. Which is sorely needed, because you need to travel between the two worlds and try to bring balance back, since certain forces try to destroy this balance and forcefully merge both worlds.
That is the basic premise and starting point of a long adventure through two worlds, where you meet a lot of colourful companions, first and foremost "Crow". He is a speaking, well..., crow that follows April after she freed him and always has a comment regarding the situation but sticks to April trough everything and is a true friend and companion.
The story starts a little more on the whimsical side, especially when you first reach Arcadia, but the more you progress the more dire the situation becomes and towards the end it leaves the humor completely by the wayside and rather chooses drama as a traveling companion.
While the original game is a full story from beginning to end, it created a fascinating world where many more stories could be told in. So they did and in 2006 they released Dreamfall: The Longest Journey, which tells the continued story from three perspectives: Zoë Castillo, a stark resident, Kian Alvane, from an theocratic empire in Arcadia, and April Ryan again. The sequel was no longer a point and click adventure, but rather a 3D adventure. Sadly, it released in the mid 2000s, which meant it of course had to have stealth and some basic combat sequences. While not disastrous, it still was not really necessary. This time the story is much more melancholic and darker than the original game. Kian is part of an invading empire in Arcadia, April is part of the resistance against them and Zoë tries to find out in Stark why people disappear and a new VR headset+drug combo turns many people into zombies.
While I did miss the more whimsical nature of the first game, I still highly enjoyed this game and its story. Walking again through Arcadia and Stark felt like visiting old friends, especially when you meet characters from the first game. I was invested into the player characters and always wanted to know, what happens next. Especially if you remembered a certain name from the first game, you couldn't help but wonder how 2 characters will come together. But sadly the game ends on a big cliffhanger.
... Which wasn't resolved for 8 very long years. In 2014 they finally released the first of Dreamfall Chapters, which concluded with its fifth episode in 2016. As the name suggests, the gameplay was again rather a 3D adventure like in Dreamfall, but this time they cut out the combat & stealth, which was the right call. The story that mostly began in Dreamfall finally got its ending and also the framework story around The Longest Journey in general. Albeit partially in a very quick way at the end where I would love to play 2 or 3 games in that in between time that is only mentioned with a "ah remember that time...".
The problem I have with talking about these 3 games is that I mostly enjoyed them for the story, which I don't want to spoil, and the world, which takes a lot of words to explain. While the concept of two worlds with magic and technology is by no means unique, Arcadia is for sure unique with a lot of love and care taken in creating it and its characters. The gameplay is okay, nothing I would recommend playing the game for.
it must've been... 20 years? since I've played it, and I still remember it. I also remember that the solution was in the guide that came with the game, and it actually acknowledged that it was one of the most convoluted puzzles in the game.
I still remember getting stuck on some underwater puzzle in Arcadia and dropping the game for a while before coming back and admitting defeat with a walkthrough guide. Definitely a game where you need to hang up your pride sometimes haha. I enjoyed both games, though Dreamfall was sadly missing some of the humor and silliness (it did try... a little). I have fond memories of the series though.
Yes, the missing humor is what I miss the most in the sequels. They tell a great story, but it is a melancholic one. Seeing Marcuria occupied by human supremacists is not what I expected to see. Concentration camps even less.
Yeah Dreamfall was a much darker game in setting and themes, and I remember that while the protagonist tried some humor here and there it was just not as rewarding to interact with certain impractical things or be goofy like you could with April. April's journal was also worth reading for some funny summaries of events, but Zoe's was generally pretty dry and more pragmatic.