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Little big adventure how8/22/2023 ![]() This world is a police state and the rule is shoot-on-sight. You find that Citadel Island is under martial law - a nigh-invincible army of clones patrols the streets, and there are tanks and sandbags and barbed-wire fences everywhere. The horror doesn’t end once you escape the asylum, though. Twinsen looks suitably disgruntled by this (but not cowed). Caught like this, you are treated to a short cinematic where Twinsen is slapped hard by a mysterious figure. You have to get through the asylum, where if an alarm panel is hit an orderly that shoots homing missiles teleports in to put you back in your cell. Okay, you beat the guy back harder and use his floating platform to escape, but that’s not all. Stuff crash-landing into a Strogg-infested base in Quake II, or Jon Irenicus’ mad dungeon in Baldur’s Gate II - LBA starts with Twinsen in a jail cell, arrested just for having a recurring dream, with an orderly coming in to beat him for tossing and turning in his sleep. LBA has perhaps one of the most brutal introductions I’ve ever been put through in a game. Just scant weeks ago, GOG.com fulfulled that wish. So I’ve been waiting about ten years for its prequel, the original Little Big Adventure ( Relentless: Twinsen’s Adventure according to some screens), to be somehow re-released so that I could bask in the series’ origins. It took a couple of tries to get into (for my brain that hadn’t quite grasped how to games yet), but once I did it was a delightful experience that just kept on giving. Little Big Adventure 2 came with our first computer, as part of the “family pack”.
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