Tunic Reviews
Tunic offers players an adventure full of mystery, but delivers a purposefully obtuse world that's impossible to sort out.
Tunic is fascinating and surprisingly deep.
Review in Italian | Read full review
An isometric homage to Zelda that is loyal from top to bottom.
Every once in a while, a true indie gem comes along.
Dicey's Zelda-inspired indie adventure Tunic gives players a magical world to explore, if they can handle the game's difficulty.
Developer Finji has put together something special with this game, a game that lures players in with its adorable mascot character and delivers a deceptively difficult adventure.
Tunic turns its many influences into something that feels both familiar and gloriously new.
Tunic is gorgeous, managing to build a world full of mystery and opportunities for exploration, with a wonderful sense of exploration.
The best "Zelda" that isn't coming from Nintendo, an unique adventure both in visuals and presentation that puts on the table smart and intelligent ideas. A game that any adventure fan looking for a new challenge should play on Xbox or PC. As simple as that, go and play it. You won't be disappointed.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Tunic is something really special. Before anything else, it’s a clear love letter to the old-school action-adventure games of the Eighties and Nineties. Beyond that, it’s an ingenious, brief and occasionally challenging masterclass of modern game design that feels much bigger than the sum of its parts.
Tunic brilliantly captures the feeling of that special childhood title that made you fall in love with video games.
It’s the perfect palate cleanser, taking anywhere between six and 20 hours, and absolutely essential if you’ve got a fondness for adventure games with a potion in their pocket, a cape around their neck, and a twinkle in their eye.
Old school adventure sensibilities and an expertly-designed puzzle box world combine in this charming and engaging indie gem.
It speaks the language of games gone by while injecting both modernity and its own personal twist.
Tunic manages to take something (obviously on a smaller scale) from Zelda, Dark Souls and Death's Door, resulting in a challenging and fascinating action-adventure even if it lacks any truly original ideas.
Review in Italian | Read full review
Tunic harkens back to the 16-bit era with a challenging adventure full of discovery and wonder.
Tunic is an unmissable adventure for all those who love to immerse themselves in an enveloping, mysterious world full of secrets to discover.
Review in Italian | Read full review
I've likened TUNIC to Fez, a similarly brilliant game that also shattered expectations, hid riddles in a new alphabet, and had an entire community rally around some of the larger secrets.
What a nice surprise this Tunic is. A true love letter to the first Zelda with a souls-like underlay to modernize everything, the game manages to keep players on their toes with its intelligent progression system, mechanics that renew themselves and its enchanting universe that hides much more than it seems.
Review in French | Read full review