Compare House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Five BN. Published by Alawar Casual. Released on 5/23/2019. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

If your idea of a good evening is a slow-burn mythology, hidden object hunts across ancient Rome and tribal villages, and a story that actually bothers to close its own loops, Serpent Flame is quietly worth your time.

I have a soft spot for hidden object adventures that take their premise seriously, and Serpent Flame commits to its mythology harder than most. You play as Kate Reed, a returning protagonist from two prior games, and if you haven't touched those earlier entries the lore about the Nagas, the Light Ones, and their abandoned planet Nibiru will wash over you somewhat hazily. The game signals this clearly enough: this is the conclusion of a trilogy, and it leans on that context. Newcomers can still follow the action beat-to-beat, but the emotional weight of the ending lands considerably harder for returning players. The structure gives you six chapters across four distinct time periods: locations range from a medieval village to ancient Rome to what feels like a crumbling tribal settlement, each one hand-painted with the kind of color care that the casual HOG genre does quietly well. Scenes are richly layered and reward patient eyes. The hidden object sequences themselves come in two varieties: traditional word-list hunts and the more interesting put-items-back-in-their-places variant, where you match a pictured object to an empty slot in the scene. That second type takes a little more spatial thinking and breaks the monotony nicely. There are around 15 hidden object scenes and 37 mini-games spread across the chapters, plus 40 collectible Beyond Objects for completionists. The interactive map lets you fast-travel with a single click, which keeps the pacing from stalling when you're juggling tasks across rooms. Two difficulty modes shape how patient the game expects you to be. Casual mode sparkles active areas and charges your hint and skip buttons in about 30 seconds. Expert strips the sparkles and doubles the recharge time, which is modest friction but enough to make scene-reading feel earned. Some of the mini-games lean toward the mechanical side: tile-matching, lock-picking, code-deciphering. The puzzle logic occasionally bends the rules of common sense, and a handful of the mini-games recycle the same object-shuffle format one too many times. One voice line too many lands with the flatness of a recording session that finished early. These are familiar genre complaints, not dealbreakers. What holds the whole thing together is the story, which starts epic and then carefully follows through. The mythology of four elemental serpents, Air Urey, Sea Leviathan, Flame Chthon, and Earth Gnosis, is genuinely inventive for this genre. Full-motion video cutscenes punctuate the key reveals, and while the rendering quality is inconsistent and the voice acting has its rough patches, the sequences add a sense of event to what could have been a static click-and-find loop. The soundtrack maintains a quiet, otherworldly tension throughout that I found myself actively listening to between puzzle interactions. For a game in this price tier, the soundscape does real atmospheric work. Serpent Flame is not the strongest entry in the House of 1000 Doors series by the account of longtime fans, who note some scene recycling in the early chapters and bonus chapter logic that drifts. But as a whole package with six chapters and a canonical bonus chapter, it is a complete and generous experience for the genre. If you have never played a hidden object adventure before and want to sample the form, the Casual mode's generosity makes this an accessible entry point. If you have played the first two games, this is the payoff chapter and it earns its ending. Kai, Scout Team

House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame
AdventureCasualIndie

House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame

May 23, 2019Five BNAlawar Casual
GamerScout Says

If your idea of a good evening is a slow-burn mythology, hidden object hunts across ancient Rome and tribal villages, and a story that actually bothers to close its own loops, Serpent Flame is quietly worth your time.

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About House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame

I have a soft spot for hidden object adventures that take their premise seriously, and Serpent Flame commits to its mythology harder than most. You play as Kate Reed, a returning protagonist from two prior games, and if you haven't touched those earlier entries the lore about the Nagas, the Light Ones, and their abandoned planet Nibiru will wash over you somewhat hazily. The game signals this clearly enough: this is the conclusion of a trilogy, and it leans on that context. Newcomers can still follow the action beat-to-beat, but the emotional weight of the ending lands considerably harder for returning players. The structure gives you six chapters across four distinct time periods: locations range from a medieval village to ancient Rome to what feels like a crumbling tribal settlement, each one hand-painted with the kind of color care that the casual HOG genre does quietly well. Scenes are richly layered and reward patient eyes. The hidden object sequences themselves come in two varieties: traditional word-list hunts and the more interesting put-items-back-in-their-places variant, where you match a pictured object to an empty slot in the scene. That second type takes a little more spatial thinking and breaks the monotony nicely. There are around 15 hidden object scenes and 37 mini-games spread across the chapters, plus 40 collectible Beyond Objects for completionists. The interactive map lets you fast-travel with a single click, which keeps the pacing from stalling when you're juggling tasks across rooms. Two difficulty modes shape how patient the game expects you to be. Casual mode sparkles active areas and charges your hint and skip buttons in about 30 seconds. Expert strips the sparkles and doubles the recharge time, which is modest friction but enough to make scene-reading feel earned. Some of the mini-games lean toward the mechanical side: tile-matching, lock-picking, code-deciphering. The puzzle logic occasionally bends the rules of common sense, and a handful of the mini-games recycle the same object-shuffle format one too many times. One voice line too many lands with the flatness of a recording session that finished early. These are familiar genre complaints, not dealbreakers. What holds the whole thing together is the story, which starts epic and then carefully follows through. The mythology of four elemental serpents, Air Urey, Sea Leviathan, Flame Chthon, and Earth Gnosis, is genuinely inventive for this genre. Full-motion video cutscenes punctuate the key reveals, and while the rendering quality is inconsistent and the voice acting has its rough patches, the sequences add a sense of event to what could have been a static click-and-find loop. The soundtrack maintains a quiet, otherworldly tension throughout that I found myself actively listening to between puzzle interactions. For a game in this price tier, the soundscape does real atmospheric work. Serpent Flame is not the strongest entry in the House of 1000 Doors series by the account of longtime fans, who note some scene recycling in the early chapters and bonus chapter logic that drifts. But as a whole package with six chapters and a canonical bonus chapter, it is a complete and generous experience for the genre. If you have never played a hidden object adventure before and want to sample the form, the Casual mode's generosity makes this an accessible entry point. If you have played the first two games, this is the payoff chapter and it earns its ending. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayercloud-savestier:sub-5Hidden ObjectTime TravelMythologyCasual Mode / Expert ModeCollectiblesPoint-and-ClickTrilogy ConclusionFast-Travel MapInventory Puzzles

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Silver

Playable on Linux with some workarounds. Based on 5 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP or later
Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
256 MB 3D video card
Processor
1.5 GHz

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 or later
Memory
1 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
512 MB 3D video card
Processor
3 GHZ processor or better

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Game Info

Developer
Five BN
Publisher
Alawar Casual
Release Date
May 23, 2019

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What platforms is House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame available on?

House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame is available on PC, Mac.

When was House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame released?

House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame was released on 23 May 2019.

Who developed House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame?

House of 1000 Doors: Serpent Flame was developed by Five BN and published by Alawar Casual.