
Twinsen’s Odyssey is a blend of an isometric (3/4 overhead view) and floating-camera 3D adventure game.

Either way, download the demo and give it a chance - it will be worth it either way. If you get bored as soon as a body stops twitching or are just looking for a game to play fifteen minutes a day during your lunch break, this may not be for you. If you like puzzle games, adventure games, and really like to get absorbed into a game, this is for you. Whether or not you like this game will be determined by one factor - how much you like this kind of game. In my opinion, it is exactly what was intended, and it is done very well. What is this game? It is a beautiful, interactive puzzle/adventure game with a little bit of action and RPG-style character progression thrown in to match. Some gamers simply are looking for a Quake-like shooter or a Myst-like picture book adventure game. However, there is a matter of opinions and likes/dislikes, and that is the area where this game takes the most flak. Don’t get me wrong - this game has excellent gameplay, and I was hanging on from beginning to end. While most of the people that play this game seem to really like it, there are a few people that just don’t get into it, and most of them are looking for something different in the gameplay department. This is the one area over which gamers seem to be divided. Twinsen must battle the aliens and their mysterious god, the Dark Monk, and save his planet and family. The Esmers, under the spell of their mysterious god, the Dark Monk, have also built powerful jet engines to ram the Emerald Moon into Twinsun and destroy it. He learns of their plot to kidnap the children of Twinsun, but is too late to stop it. Twinsen, now a graduate magician, is kidnapped by the Esmers and taken to the planet Zeelich. Trouble begins with the arrival of unidentified space ships piloted by strange beings called Esmers. As described on Activision’s homepage, Twinsen has been the hero of the planet Twinsun since he vanquished the evil dictator Dr.
