Thimbleweed Park Reviews

Thimbleweed Park is ranked in the 89th percentile of games scored on OpenCritic.
Unscored
Mar 30, 2017

At the beginning of the game, I'd hoped to solve a mystery and have a few laughs, but now I miss the company of this little crew. It's a smart game though and a thoughtful one, even if it sometimes hides those qualities behind its clown makeup and a beaglepuss.

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8 / 10
Mar 30, 2017

A point and click adventure for the now, Thimbleweed Park takes everything great about classic Lucasfilm games and leaves out the flaws. You might not love all the central characters, but this is as  weird and compelling a town as Twin Peaks.

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8 / 10.0
Mar 30, 2017

Thimbleweed Park is almost too successful channeling a different era of adventure games.

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8 / 10
Mar 30, 2017

Overall though, the ex-LucasArts game veterans have created an appealing, and effective love letter to the movement they started back in the day. If you loved growing up with those titles, your decision has most likely already been made. For everyone else, Thimbleweed Park's darkly humorous and self-referential approach, in combination with its oddball bunch of characters – everyone will have a different favourite – makes it an adventure well-worth pointing your cursor at.

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7 / 10
Mar 30, 2017

Thimbleweed Park is a point-and-click adventure full of enticing secrets to uncover, but its adherence to the genre's unremedied issues sometimes brings it down.

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9 / 10.0
Mar 30, 2017

Do you miss the LucasArts adventures of the '90s? Thimbleweed Park is the best way to win the nostalgia and to play an adventure game that is already a must.

Review in Italian | Read full review

9 / 10
Mar 30, 2017

Wtih Thimbleweed Park, Ron Gilbert proves that he has definitely not lost the magic wand he used decades ago to conceive point and click adventures. This game is ridiculously fun and well-built, will make you think and laugh really hard from the beginning to the end. It really fells like an undiscovered LucasArts game we've never played before.

Review in French | Read full review

Unscored
Mar 30, 2017

Thimbleweed Park isn’t just another point-and-click adventure game. It’s the point-and-click adventure game I’ve been waiting for since discovering Maniac Mansion hiding inside of Day of the Tentacle, back when I was 8 years old.

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Mar 31, 2017

Thimbleweed Park is a fun and challenging point-and-click adventure game. With a great noir feel, a cast of interesting characters, and tons to explore, this game is great for old fans of the genre and new fans alike. There is a ton to see, do and interact with, delivering a fantastic all-around game.

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Digitally Downloaded
Nick Hu.
Top Critic
Mar 31, 2017

Ultimately, this is a game anyone that loved adventure games will enjoy, and find entertainment in. There are quite a few nods to the Lucasarts/Lucasfilm stable, cameos and a continuation of jokes that have been there since the first Edison encounter. In terms of where it would sit alongside the earlier adventure games, it's definitely a B-side, but being a B-side to the likes of Monkey Island, Zak McKracken and Day of the Tentacle is still a pretty mean feat.

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Metro GameCentral
GameCentral
Top Critic
8 / 10
Mar 31, 2017

The best point ‘n’ click adventure since the glory days of LucasArts, filled with smart dialogue and even smarter puzzles.

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Unscored
Mar 31, 2017

This is simultaneously a joke about pixel hunting, a joke about adventure games, and a joke about the dumb things that players will do in video games. Did you ever think you'd want to hunt for pixels again? And did you ever think that the act of hunting pixels might be fun? Thimbleweed Park somehow both subverts pixel-hunting and makes you want to hunt pixels, which is just about all you can ask for in an adventure game.

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8.5 / 10.0
Mar 31, 2017

Thimbleweed Park is an extraterrestrial joy and the reinvigoration the genre has desperately needed

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Recommended
Mar 31, 2017

Thimbleweed Park is what would happen if you moved Nightvale into Monkey Island, and gave everyone too much rum.

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9 / 10.0
Mar 31, 2017

An adventure game with a style that is clearly recognizable, traditional and innovative at the same time, nostalgic and ironic, tender and sarcastic. A gameplay crafted by masters, in which even the casual mode shines, proudly closed in its 1987 mood, and yet so much modern and with many more things to say than many other point and click games. It is not the nostalgia who talks: it is the voice of a hand-crafted videogame.

Review in Italian | Read full review

Adam Riley
Top Critic
6 / 10
Apr 1, 2017

Thimbleweed Park had so much going for it, and still delivers in many ways, with a delightful retro appearance, some really impressive puzzles throughout, and great voice acting. However, it also drags itself down with filler content, extra characters that do not really serve much purpose, a rather average story that tries to be a bit too clever for its own good, forced humour that more often than not misses the mark, and that old verb gameplay mechanic that should have been left in its grave. Give it a go, but head in with realistic expectations rather than expecting the classic some were banking on.

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10 / 10.0
Apr 1, 2017

Another masterpiece from Ron Gilbert. The game is a joy to play and provides the perfect mix of humour, challenge and engaging storyline. I genuinely have nothing but praise for the game and I can’t recommend it enough.

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89 / 100
Apr 2, 2017

A real pleasure for point and click lovers. It's not only superb on its own merit, but also as a homage to the great classics of the genre.

Review in Spanish | Read full review

8.5 / 10.0
Apr 3, 2017

I’ve missed having a great adventure game to play, and thanks to the skilled veterans at Terrible Toybox, this one is up there as one of the best ever.

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9.5 / 10.0
Apr 3, 2017

Thimbleweed Park is one of those games that speaks to those people who enjoy the genre, and it's certainly good enough that it will hopefully attract newcomers as well. It's fan service and an all new exciting game at the same time. Hopefully this is the first of more from Terrible Toybox; regardless, this is a gem and a must-have for anyone that likes games that are story, character, and puzzle-driven adventures.

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