Compara los precios de Not Another Weekend en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Animatic Vision. Publicado por Dionous Games. Lanzado el 20/5/2021. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Adventure, Indie. Puntuación Metacritic: 75/100.

Part Monkey Island homage, part gleeful jerk simulator: Mike Melkout's 48-hour hotel-clearing scheme is the funniest point-and-click premise in years, and it mostly delivers on that promise.

I have a soft spot for point-and-click games that understand exactly what they are and lean into it without apology, and Not Another Weekend from Animatic Vision is precisely that kind of game. You play as Mike Melkout, a distinctly unhinged bellboy at the Hotel 404 who needs every guest and employee off the premises by Sunday evening for reasons the game slowly, darkly reveals. The loop is essentially what one reviewer aptly called an "annoy 'em up": you wander the hotel's floors, pick up objects, combine them with other objects, and figure out increasingly absurd ways to make each character's stay utterly untenable. There is no combat, no death screen, no time pressure bearing down on your reflexes. The whole thing is deliberately low-stakes in execution, which gives the comedy room to breathe. The '80s setting is not just wallpaper. The cast of characters reads like a loving fever-dream of pop culture caricatures: a barely-disguised Indiana Jones stand-in named Westy Jones, a pair of bespectacled computer-nerd twins called Point and Click Jefferson, a washed-up wrestler, a fading pop singer. Each guest gets their own self-contained narrative arc, and the structure of vignettes-within-a-whole means the pacing stays lively even as the hotel fills out. The Beeper 2000 gadget and the Notemap (a floor plan that tracks your targets and teleports you between floors) are quality-of-life wins that the genre genuinely needed. Pressing the spacebar highlights every interactable object on screen, which sidesteps the pixel-hunting frustration that plagued the old LucasArts era. The developers clearly thought about friction and removed most of it. The pixel art is deliberately rough in a way that suits the Atari-era aesthetic the team was chasing. Character designs are caricatured down to a few expressive, iconic features, and the animation is noticeably smoother than you might expect given how lo-fi the sprites read at a glance. The soundtrack, meanwhile, is the kind of synth-flavored thing you will leave running in a background tab. Players who finished the game reported anywhere from ten to sixteen hours of playtime depending on how thoroughly they interrogated every corner of the hotel, which feels genuinely generous at its price point. The puzzle difficulty sits in a comfortable middle zone: logical enough that solutions feel earned, loose enough that you rarely feel stuck for long. One late-game puzzle has a reputation for snagging people, and the game's horror-bookend framing will catch a few players off-guard, but neither is a dealbreaker. The fair criticism is that the premise runs a little thin in spots. The story trades depth for pace in a few of the guest arcs, and if you are someone who wants layered, psychologically complex characters from your adventure games, this is not that. What it is instead is consistently funny, propulsive, and crafted with genuine love for the genre's golden era. The adult humor is present throughout (the game is candid about implicit sexual content and mature themes in its own disclaimers), so players who prefer their comedy clean should know what they are getting into. Kai, Scout Team

Not Another Weekend

Not Another Weekend

20 may 2021Animatic VisionDionous Games
GamerScout opina

Part Monkey Island homage, part gleeful jerk simulator: Mike Melkout's 48-hour hotel-clearing scheme is the funniest point-and-click premise in years, and it mostly delivers on that promise.

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Acerca de Not Another Weekend

I have a soft spot for point-and-click games that understand exactly what they are and lean into it without apology, and Not Another Weekend from Animatic Vision is precisely that kind of game. You play as Mike Melkout, a distinctly unhinged bellboy at the Hotel 404 who needs every guest and employee off the premises by Sunday evening for reasons the game slowly, darkly reveals. The loop is essentially what one reviewer aptly called an "annoy 'em up": you wander the hotel's floors, pick up objects, combine them with other objects, and figure out increasingly absurd ways to make each character's stay utterly untenable. There is no combat, no death screen, no time pressure bearing down on your reflexes. The whole thing is deliberately low-stakes in execution, which gives the comedy room to breathe. The '80s setting is not just wallpaper. The cast of characters reads like a loving fever-dream of pop culture caricatures: a barely-disguised Indiana Jones stand-in named Westy Jones, a pair of bespectacled computer-nerd twins called Point and Click Jefferson, a washed-up wrestler, a fading pop singer. Each guest gets their own self-contained narrative arc, and the structure of vignettes-within-a-whole means the pacing stays lively even as the hotel fills out. The Beeper 2000 gadget and the Notemap (a floor plan that tracks your targets and teleports you between floors) are quality-of-life wins that the genre genuinely needed. Pressing the spacebar highlights every interactable object on screen, which sidesteps the pixel-hunting frustration that plagued the old LucasArts era. The developers clearly thought about friction and removed most of it. The pixel art is deliberately rough in a way that suits the Atari-era aesthetic the team was chasing. Character designs are caricatured down to a few expressive, iconic features, and the animation is noticeably smoother than you might expect given how lo-fi the sprites read at a glance. The soundtrack, meanwhile, is the kind of synth-flavored thing you will leave running in a background tab. Players who finished the game reported anywhere from ten to sixteen hours of playtime depending on how thoroughly they interrogated every corner of the hotel, which feels genuinely generous at its price point. The puzzle difficulty sits in a comfortable middle zone: logical enough that solutions feel earned, loose enough that you rarely feel stuck for long. One late-game puzzle has a reputation for snagging people, and the game's horror-bookend framing will catch a few players off-guard, but neither is a dealbreaker. The fair criticism is that the premise runs a little thin in spots. The story trades depth for pace in a few of the guest arcs, and if you are someone who wants layered, psychologically complex characters from your adventure games, this is not that. What it is instead is consistently funny, propulsive, and crafted with genuine love for the genre's golden era. The adult humor is present throughout (the game is candid about implicit sexual content and mature themes in its own disclaimers), so players who prefer their comedy clean should know what they are getting into.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:aaa80s NostalgiaAnnoy-em-upInventory PuzzlesQuality-of-Life FriendlyAdult HumorVignette StructureHorror UndertonesBeginner-Friendly

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
10 or later
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
300 MB available space
Graphics
3D graphics card compatible with OpenGL 2.0 compatible with 1 GB RAM
Processor
2.5 GHz (Single Core) or 2 GHz (Dual Core)

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Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
75

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Animatic Vision
Distribuidora
Dionous Games
Fecha de lanzamiento
20 may 2021

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Not Another Weekend?

Not Another Weekend está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Not Another Weekend?

Not Another Weekend se lanzó el 20 de mayo de 2021.

¿Quién desarrolló Not Another Weekend?

Not Another Weekend fue desarrollado por Animatic Vision y publicado por Dionous Games.

¿Merece la pena comprar Not Another Weekend?

Not Another Weekend tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 75/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Adventure. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.