Phonopolis Reviews
Phonopolis is a vibrant and beautiful adventure game you can finish in one evening. Challenging enough to stay engaging, and just dark enough without losing its harmless sense of humor.
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Phonopolis is an excellent example of a game constructed carefully in terms of its narrative, structural design, and gameplay. It bears the signature of Amanita Design but takes things in a very stylized manner. While the game can be loved or disliked, there is certainly enough material in it visually, audibly, and structurally to make it memorable.
Amanita’s handmade charm shines through, even if Phonopolis’ uneven puzzle design holds it back.
Phonopolis lasts around four to five hours, which feels like the perfect length for a game trying to communicate such meaningful themes while fully immersing the player in its audiovisual artistry. Not every puzzle is as polished as it could have been, but this is still a powerful and thoughtfully crafted indie title.
Phonopolis is the most beautiful and artfully-constructed game yet from Amanita Design, a studio that knows a thing or two about making such games. Phonopolis perhaps doesn't venture quite as far outside the point 'n' click adventure box as it could, but fans of the genre who don't mind the occasional obtuse puzzle and a short-ish runtime will likely find themselves singing the game's praises.
Phonopolis’s driving narrative force, Felix, is a lovable everyman kind of character. A bit too trusting, maybe, but a good-hearted, bumbling person that finds his way forward through the red tape of bureaucracy and injustice, much like most players will when roadblocked by some of the game’s truly stumping puzzles. A must-play for audiophiles, Phonopolis sings a memorable melody against the backdrop of intriguing game design that moves to its own drummer’s beat.