Testseek.fr ont rassemblé 23 examens experts du Moons of Madness et l'estimation moyenne est 64%. Faites descendre l'écran et voyez les toutes les revues pour Moons of Madness.
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Les éditeurs ont aimé
Le côté horreur martien à la Lovecraft efficace
De bonnes énigmes intelligentes bien trouvées
Un gameplay qui a tendance à se varier
Narration intéressante au début
Immersif avec des phases en extérieur sympas
Ambiance sonore anxiogène et
Les éditeurs n'ont pas aimé
Bien qu'inégal au fil du jeu
Même si certaines sont trop faciles et maladroites
Disposant d'un rythme assez mou
Bien trop confuse et déjà-vu
Des jumpscares prévisibles en plus de ne pas tant faire peur que ça
Le côté horreur martien à la Lovecraft efficace, De bonnes énigmes intelligentes bien trouvées, Un gameplay qui a tendance à se varier, Narration intéressante au début, Immersif avec des phases en extérieur sympas, Ambiance sonore anxiogène et
Bien qu'inégal au fil du jeu, Même si certaines sont trop faciles et maladroites, Disposant d'un rythme assez mou, Bien trop confuse et déjà-vu, Des jumpscares prévisibles en plus de ne pas tant faire peur que ça, Quelques ralentissements
Je n'attendais rien de ce Moons of Madness et finalement j'en suis quand même très déçu. Le postulat de départ m'a beaucoup plu comme son ambiance lourde et inquiétante, jusqu'à que tout soit foutu en l'air en progressant de plus en plus. Le studio a vrai...
Level design is beautifully crafted and gives a sense of immersion, Interactions with objects in the world are next level, Presentation and use of technology in the game is sci-fi goodness
The storylines that you come across feel shallow, Performance issues from beginning to end, Dialogue is a bit on the nose and tells too much of the story and objectives
Moons of Madness plays more like a cinematic experience than an actual game. Its immersion visually is sublime, and though objects are intuitively interactive, the story lacks the emotional pull needed to match the tone and mood set forth. You will undoub...
Nothing about the Lovecraftian horror of Moons of Madness is outright terrible, but its slow, chore-heavy gameplay doesn't conjure up a lot of reasons to forgive the fact that there's just not a lot of incentive to visit its haunted corner of Mars. Althou...
Fun, twisty story, Varied, often intense set pieces, Some solid puzzle designs, Nice evocative visuals, Creepy sound design
Jokey tone takes getting used to, Rare quick time events suck, Little replay value
Moons of Madness is the best of the recent rash of Lovecraft games. It isn't as dark or atmospheric as some of its macabre competitors, but it's well-crafted, nicely varied, and builds to a satisfying, pulse-pounding crescendo. If you don't mind your Love...
Moons of Madness needed to cut away all of the extra ideas on the periphery and figure out what it's about. There are so many themes and concepts shoved into the adventure that they sprawl all over each other, taking up time and space, and failing to scar...
"Lovecraftian" horror that doesn't quite stick the tentacled landing.Tepid TentaclesI'm a big fan of science fiction and the works of H. P. Lovecraft, so when a game claims to be a Martian exploration game shrouded in a Lovecraftian cloak my interest is...
Extrait: With a few key exceptions, it wasn't so long ago that the horror game genre swerved obnoxiously hard towards stealth-first gameplay that outright denied you the chance to face your fears head-on.Brought about by Amnesia ( The Dark Descent, not the condit...
Moons of Madness takes a basketful of familiar ideas and serves up a delicious picnic of science fiction horror with plenty of tension and a handful of memorable close-encounters with malevolent cosmic deities.It should go without saying that you'll get m...
Well-crafted adaptation of Lovecraft's work Intriguing narrative Decent voice-acting, particularly Shane Set within Funcom's Secret World universe, if that's your thing,
Stealth and action sequences that feel like they don't belong Yes, we all know HP Lovecraft was a horrible racist
Moons of Madness is a welcome entry into the sci-fi horror subgenre and it's great to see cosmic horror taking place in the actual cosmos. The narrative is engaging and kept me invested until the end, even through the ill-fitting stealth and action sequen...