Compare Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Alawar Friday's Games. Published by Alawar Casual. Released on 12/20/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

Warm fairy-tale HOG with hand-drawn winter scenery that punches above its genre weight, though veterans will breeze through it and the bonus chapter is the weakest part of the package.

I have a soft spot for the hidden-object genre when it actually bothers to build a world rather than just string together sparkle zones, and Snow Kingdom earns that kind of attention about halfway through its opening chapter. You play Alan, a hunter who pulls a princess named Adele out of danger, only to watch her get sealed inside a magical snow globe minutes later. It is a Brothers Grimm premise worn openly on its sleeve, and the game layers in a clockwork-steampunk flavour that keeps the backdrop from feeling like plain vanilla fairy tale. The warlock at the centre of the story turns out to have a more considered backstory than most antagonists in this genre, which is a quiet surprise and the best argument for reading every journal entry the game hands you. The structure leans much heavier on adventure-game logic than on pure hidden-object hunting. There are only ten proper HOG scenes in the main story, each revisited more than once, and the real bulk of your time goes into inventory puzzles across thirty-five distinct locations. A lynx companion retrieves items from out-of-reach spots, which is both charming and genuinely useful rather than a throwaway gimmick. Fast-travel via an in-world map keeps backtracking from becoming tedious, and the game even gives a lore-friendly reason why teleportation exists, a small detail that shows someone cared. Mini-games range from assembling a compass to steering a hot-air balloon through storm clouds, and skipping any of them is always an option without penalty. Collectible snowflakes in every location and twelve hidden magic scrolls give completionists a quiet secondary layer to engage with. On the visual side, the hand-painted scenes are genuinely lovely. Snow-laden forests, an airship interior, a tailor's shop, a windmill in winter - each setting carries its own texture and the colour palette stays rich without tipping into garish. The soundtrack, which you can download separately as part of the Collector's Edition extras, is understated and ambient in the way that good HOG music should be, supporting the mood rather than competing with it. Sound design throughout is clean. Voice acting is the weakest audio element - delivered competently enough but with the kind of flatness that reminds you these lines were read rather than performed. Where the game falls short is predictable for the genre. Veteran HOG players will find the difficulty ceiling low even on Hard mode, and some puzzle instructions leave just enough out to cause minor friction before the solution clicks anyway. The real disappointment, flagged consistently by players across platforms, is the bonus chapter. Where the main ten-chapter run sustains a comfortable pace and narrative coherence, the bonus episode feels looser and less essential. It is still content, and the Collector's Edition packs in wallpapers, production art, and the soundtrack to sweeten the deal, but do not go in expecting the bonus chapter to match what came before it. If you play HOGs regularly and want something that tips its hat to Grimm with more adventure padding than object-hunting grind, Snow Kingdom does that job with visible craft and an atmosphere that lingers a little longer than the runtime suggests it should. Kai, Scout Team

Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition
AdventureCasualIndie

Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition

Dec 20, 2017Alawar Friday's GamesAlawar Casual
GamerScout Says

Warm fairy-tale HOG with hand-drawn winter scenery that punches above its genre weight, though veterans will breeze through it and the bonus chapter is the weakest part of the package.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition

I have a soft spot for the hidden-object genre when it actually bothers to build a world rather than just string together sparkle zones, and Snow Kingdom earns that kind of attention about halfway through its opening chapter. You play Alan, a hunter who pulls a princess named Adele out of danger, only to watch her get sealed inside a magical snow globe minutes later. It is a Brothers Grimm premise worn openly on its sleeve, and the game layers in a clockwork-steampunk flavour that keeps the backdrop from feeling like plain vanilla fairy tale. The warlock at the centre of the story turns out to have a more considered backstory than most antagonists in this genre, which is a quiet surprise and the best argument for reading every journal entry the game hands you. The structure leans much heavier on adventure-game logic than on pure hidden-object hunting. There are only ten proper HOG scenes in the main story, each revisited more than once, and the real bulk of your time goes into inventory puzzles across thirty-five distinct locations. A lynx companion retrieves items from out-of-reach spots, which is both charming and genuinely useful rather than a throwaway gimmick. Fast-travel via an in-world map keeps backtracking from becoming tedious, and the game even gives a lore-friendly reason why teleportation exists, a small detail that shows someone cared. Mini-games range from assembling a compass to steering a hot-air balloon through storm clouds, and skipping any of them is always an option without penalty. Collectible snowflakes in every location and twelve hidden magic scrolls give completionists a quiet secondary layer to engage with. On the visual side, the hand-painted scenes are genuinely lovely. Snow-laden forests, an airship interior, a tailor's shop, a windmill in winter - each setting carries its own texture and the colour palette stays rich without tipping into garish. The soundtrack, which you can download separately as part of the Collector's Edition extras, is understated and ambient in the way that good HOG music should be, supporting the mood rather than competing with it. Sound design throughout is clean. Voice acting is the weakest audio element - delivered competently enough but with the kind of flatness that reminds you these lines were read rather than performed. Where the game falls short is predictable for the genre. Veteran HOG players will find the difficulty ceiling low even on Hard mode, and some puzzle instructions leave just enough out to cause minor friction before the solution clicks anyway. The real disappointment, flagged consistently by players across platforms, is the bonus chapter. Where the main ten-chapter run sustains a comfortable pace and narrative coherence, the bonus episode feels looser and less essential. It is still content, and the Collector's Edition packs in wallpapers, production art, and the soundtrack to sweeten the deal, but do not go in expecting the bonus chapter to match what came before it. If you play HOGs regularly and want something that tips its hat to Grimm with more adventure padding than object-hunting grind, Snow Kingdom does that job with visible craft and an atmosphere that lingers a little longer than the runtime suggests it should. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayercloud-savestier:sub-5Hidden ObjectFairy TalePoint-and-ClickInventory PuzzlesSteampunk ElementsCollectiblesCasual PuzzleShort Playthrough

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Platinum

Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 5 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP or later
Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0b
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
• nVidia GeForce FX 6 series, AMD Radeon 9500, or Intel HD Graphics card
Processor
1.5 GHz
Sound Card
Direct X 9 Compatible Sound Device

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 or later
Memory
1024 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0b
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
• nVidia GeForce FX 6 series, AMD Radeon 9500, or Intel HD Graphics card
Processor
3 GHZ processor or better
Sound Card
DirectX-compatible sound card

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Game Info

Developer
Alawar Friday's Games
Publisher
Alawar Casual
Release Date
Dec 20, 2017

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Frequently asked questions about Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition

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What platforms is Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition available on?

Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition is available on PC.

When was Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition released?

Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition was released on 20 December 2017.

Who developed Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition?

Dark Strokes: The Legend of the Snow Kingdom Collector’s Edition was developed by Alawar Friday's Games and published by Alawar Casual.