Tag Archives: limbo

Massive Xbox Live Sale! discountsFTW!

[Update] These Pormotions are no longer valid: This week, April 12-18, Xbox Live Marketplace is having another big sale event along with  “Deal of the Week“. Plus, on Friday April 15, there will also be another One Day Only sale. With a wide selection of Xbox Live arcade titles, Downloadable Content and Avatar Items, So bust out those left over space bucks and enjoy the savings. The list below includes both Deal of the Week, One Day Only and Microsoft Game Studios sale offered products. Links (directly to xbox.com’s xbox live marketplace) for each item are provided, so if your not near your xbox 360 you can simply click-add-& queue it up for later, but retain the price, happy downloading.

Limbo: The Meta Game

Don’t worry folks, this is going to be spoiler free so don’t worry.

A lot is going on in the world of Limbo. While many people who have played the new game from Playdead games have found their way though and got all the achievements, another tale is still going on. If you have played Limbo then you know that for some achievements you have to find glowing orbs hidden in the game. Now this is all fairly straight forward…but there are actually MORE orbs then there are achievements. The orbs give you completion percentage and people have been clamoring up the charts and still are as we speak. The top spot has changed at least five times and people have been playing themselves almost to death to be the first to find the next orb. So far at least ten have been discovered, but people on the leaderboards are showing percentages above even what that would get you so there must be more. The boards over at xbox360achievements.org have been going crazy digging up info. If you have anything to contribute jump on over and let everyone know.

Hidden Eggs Thread


Van Redd Reviews: Limbo

Darkness and Light are two of the simplest forms of artistic expression, and yet for all time they have been the most powerful. The subtext is easy to understand…quite primal in fact. Limbo plays to this strength and is one of the most haunting games I have ever played.

Haunting is quite apt as your character, a young boy, looks like a lost spirit. His form is black save for his dots of light eyes. The world he traverses through is a mix of shadow and light, the forms of trees and buildings just faintly apparent. From the very beginning you feel as if things are not right. You are made to feel weak and helpless; one hit will send you to your doom. Death lurks at every corner in this world and can come at you unexpectedly. From a huge spider and brain controlling slugs to environmental hazards like electric lines and buzz-saws. Each death is a very VERY gristly end for your little companion.

Limbo is actually a rather simple platformer. The controls are as simple as it gets; you use one button to run, one to jump and one to activate/push/pull. While this seems easy the trick to this game is in how devious the game becomes in timing what to do with when to do it. Limbo requires you to be creative and think outside of the “Mario Box”. You will not be jumping on enemies heads, instead you must lure them into traps, avoid them, or take advantage of a weakened foe.

Later in the game you will face devious gravity puzzles, be required to backtrack, and your brain will be stretched to figure out just how to get to your goal. Your goal, though, is not made very clear. You get a small indication that you are after a girl, your sister according to promotional materials. You are never told how you came to be in the forest; actually your never told anything. There are no cutscenes to really speak of, no dialogue, and no text to read. A highly subjective ending awaits you that I will in no way spoil, all I can say is that you will have to make your own mind up about this story of this game even more so than in Braid.

I was able to power though this game in a marathon six hour session, so be aware that this is not a game that is going to take up a huge amount of time.  I do not regret it and I do need to go back though and pick up some of the hidden orbs you can find. While I do enjoy the art style and minimalist approach, it does feel this was made as a “games are art” game merely for the sake of it.

BOTTOM LINE: While Limbo is a exciting, beautiful, and haunting experience the price tag is rather high. I totally recommend playing it but be aware that your only going to get about seven total hours of this game unless your into replaying it again and again.