by Alice O'Connor, Mar 13, 2013 5:15pm PDT
Wadjet Eye Games has done fine work to keep adventure games, publishing and also developing many respectable click 'em ups. If you've been stuck under a rock, perhaps trying bizarre combinations of items in your pockets to lift it, you can now pick up a healthy chunk of Wadjet's catalog for an Abe. A new pay-what-you-want bundle offers seven games published by Wadjet for as little as $5, including sci-fi noir Gemini Rue and Resonance.
Read more: Puzzle Bots and the Blackwell series too »
by Alice O'Connor, Oct 27, 2011 6:45am PDT
The Humble Indie Bundle popularized the 'pay what you want' model for indie games. Now, new site Indie Royale is running with it. Every two weeks, Indie Royale will launch a 'pay what you want' bundle of four indie games, but with a minimum price that rises and falls depending on how generous customers are.
The first bundle is available now, packing Gemini Rue, Sanctum, Nimbus, and A.R.E.S.: Extinction Agenda.
Read more: Codes can be redeemed on Steam and Desura »
by Jeff Mattas, Mar 08, 2011 5:30pm PST
If you're a fan of point-and-click adventure games, you may already be familiar with indie developer Wadjet Eye Games. Founded back in 2006, Wadjet Eye has released a handful of adventures, including The Shivah and three games in the Blackwell series, as well as Erin Robinson's charming robotic adventure, Puzzle Bots.
Wadjet Eye Games was also nominated for a "Best New Studio" award at GDC 2007. Most recently, the studio published developer Joshua Nurenberger’s neo-noir adventure, Gemini Rue, which just became available a couple of weeks ago. Read more »
by Alice O'Connor, Jan 11, 2011 4:00pm PST
The three great tastes of neo-noir, sci-fi and adventure games will come together on February 24 with the launch of indie developer Joshua Nuernberger's Gemini Rue, publisher Wadjet Eye Games confirmed today.
Set in a dystopian future, Gemini Rue alternates between two characters--an ex-assassin seeking a defector and a hospital inmate who's been brain-wiped. The game seemed well worth keeping an eye on when I got to play a bit last year, plus it was a finalist in the 2010 Independent Games Festival Student Showcase, then named 'Boryokudan Rue.' Read more »
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