Compare Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Seedy Eye Software. Published by Limited Run Games. Released on 2/13/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG.

Seedy Eye Software built a whole game around the question nobody asked: what if the Zelda CD-i games were actually worth playing? The answer sits at 96% positive on Steam, and it earned every one of those thumbs up.

I have a soft spot for games that treat the most disreputable corners of gaming history with genuine love instead of lazy irony, and Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore is exactly that kind of project. Seedy Eye Software - the name itself is a phonetic wink at Philips CD-i - spent real creative energy building a spiritual successor to Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon, two side-scrolling platformers that the internet knows almost entirely through meme compilations. The result is something quietly remarkable: a 4-5 hour action-platformer that is both a faithful recreation of a famously terrible aesthetic and a legitimately playable game in its own right. The structure will feel familiar to anyone who has touched a Metroidvania or a gated exploration platformer. You traverse Faramore's fourteen bite-sized levels as Princess Arzette, lighting five Sacred Beacons, collecting Sacred Candles to push back Daimur's darkness, and hunting down the five shards of the Jewel of Faramore. The inventory fills out gradually - bomb glove, lantern, canteen - and each new item gates off previously unreachable routes, which means you will be revisiting levels. The semi-linear design makes backtracking feel purposeful most of the time, though a handful of objectives lean on early-90s obscurity that can tip from charming into frustrating depending on your patience. Hitboxes carry some of that intentional CD-i roughness, and the initial difficulty curve can feel steep before Arzette picks up upgrades and extra hearts from completed side-quests. A boss rush mode and a harder difficulty that locks in the original CD-i control scheme are there for players who want the full punishment. The real heartbeat of the game is its animated cutscenes. Every NPC encounter triggers a short cartoon rendered with deliberately jagged pixels, elastic limbs, unhinged zooms, and voice performances pitched somewhere between committed and unhinged. The craft required to convincingly reproduce bad animation is genuinely underappreciated - Seedy Eye pulls it off with a precision that makes each scene land as parody and homage simultaneously, never fully tipping into either direction. The soundtrack, built from cheesy low-quality samples and a groovy bass-forward sensibility, keeps the whole thing humming along at the exact frequency those CD-i games once accidentally stumbled into. Hand-painted backgrounds contrast against flat sprite characters in a way that should look wrong but somehow feels right, and the colorful cast - including voice talent from the original CD-i Zelda productions - gives the world of Faramore a personality that outlasts the runtime. Where the game struggles is in carrying players who have no context for any of this. The references, the visual comedy, and the intentional jank all land harder if you have at least seen the YouTube compilations. Without that frame, what remains is a competent but unremarkable side-scroller with slightly clunky combat and a lot of level-hopping. The bosses are also a genuine soft spot - upgrade the ring to deflect projectiles early and several encounters become trivially easy. For a game this short, a little more resistance in those final confrontations would have made the Jewel-infused sword payoff feel earned rather than ceremonial. For the right player, though, none of that diminishes what Arzette accomplishes. It is a short, strange, handcrafted game that knows exactly what it is, commits completely, and ends before it wears out its welcome. The kind of game that gets made once. Kai, Scout Team

Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore
ActionAdventureIndieRPG

Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore

Feb 13, 2024Seedy Eye SoftwareLimited Run Games
GamerScout Says

Seedy Eye Software built a whole game around the question nobody asked: what if the Zelda CD-i games were actually worth playing? The answer sits at 96% positive on Steam, and it earned every one of those thumbs up.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore

I have a soft spot for games that treat the most disreputable corners of gaming history with genuine love instead of lazy irony, and Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore is exactly that kind of project. Seedy Eye Software - the name itself is a phonetic wink at Philips CD-i - spent real creative energy building a spiritual successor to Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon, two side-scrolling platformers that the internet knows almost entirely through meme compilations. The result is something quietly remarkable: a 4-5 hour action-platformer that is both a faithful recreation of a famously terrible aesthetic and a legitimately playable game in its own right. The structure will feel familiar to anyone who has touched a Metroidvania or a gated exploration platformer. You traverse Faramore's fourteen bite-sized levels as Princess Arzette, lighting five Sacred Beacons, collecting Sacred Candles to push back Daimur's darkness, and hunting down the five shards of the Jewel of Faramore. The inventory fills out gradually - bomb glove, lantern, canteen - and each new item gates off previously unreachable routes, which means you will be revisiting levels. The semi-linear design makes backtracking feel purposeful most of the time, though a handful of objectives lean on early-90s obscurity that can tip from charming into frustrating depending on your patience. Hitboxes carry some of that intentional CD-i roughness, and the initial difficulty curve can feel steep before Arzette picks up upgrades and extra hearts from completed side-quests. A boss rush mode and a harder difficulty that locks in the original CD-i control scheme are there for players who want the full punishment. The real heartbeat of the game is its animated cutscenes. Every NPC encounter triggers a short cartoon rendered with deliberately jagged pixels, elastic limbs, unhinged zooms, and voice performances pitched somewhere between committed and unhinged. The craft required to convincingly reproduce bad animation is genuinely underappreciated - Seedy Eye pulls it off with a precision that makes each scene land as parody and homage simultaneously, never fully tipping into either direction. The soundtrack, built from cheesy low-quality samples and a groovy bass-forward sensibility, keeps the whole thing humming along at the exact frequency those CD-i games once accidentally stumbled into. Hand-painted backgrounds contrast against flat sprite characters in a way that should look wrong but somehow feels right, and the colorful cast - including voice talent from the original CD-i Zelda productions - gives the world of Faramore a personality that outlasts the runtime. Where the game struggles is in carrying players who have no context for any of this. The references, the visual comedy, and the intentional jank all land harder if you have at least seen the YouTube compilations. Without that frame, what remains is a competent but unremarkable side-scroller with slightly clunky combat and a lot of level-hopping. The bosses are also a genuine soft spot - upgrade the ring to deflect projectiles early and several encounters become trivially easy. For a game this short, a little more resistance in those final confrontations would have made the Jewel-infused sword payoff feel earned rather than ceremonial. For the right player, though, none of that diminishes what Arzette accomplishes. It is a short, strange, handcrafted game that knows exactly what it is, commits completely, and ends before it wears out its welcome. The kind of game that gets made once. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5CD-i HomageGated ExplorationAbsurdist HumorShort CompletableHand-painted BackgroundsSemi-linear PlatformerBoss Rush ModeFMV-style Cutscenes

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 7 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
2 GB VRAM
Processor
Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
4 GB VRAM
Processor
Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Seedy Eye Software
Publisher
Limited Run Games
Release Date
Feb 13, 2024

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Frequently asked questions about Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore

Where can I buy Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore cheapest?

Compare Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore available on?

Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore is available on PC.

When was Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore released?

Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore was released on 13 February 2024.

Who developed Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore?

Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore was developed by Seedy Eye Software and published by Limited Run Games.