Compare Lost Horizon Double Pack prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Animation Arts GmbH. Published by Deep Silver. Released on 10/2/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Bird View, Adventure.

Two point-and-click adventures in one package: a well-loved 1930s globe-trotter and its Cold War sequel. The first is the stronger game; the second is rougher around the edges but still worth a look for genre fans.

The Lost Horizon Double Pack bundles two point-and-click adventure games from Animation Arts, the studio behind the Secret Files series. The first game drops you into 1936, casting you as Fenton Paddock, a former British soldier turned smuggler who gets pulled into a hunt for a friend gone missing in Tibet. That thread unravels across three continents, tangling with Nazi occult schemes and exotic, carefully hand-painted locations. It is classic birds-eye adventure design: hunt for interactive objects in each scene, gather key items, combine them in your inventory, and think your way past logic puzzles to push the story forward. The pacing is steady, the writing has genuine wit, and the overall reception from players has been strongly positive. The second game shifts the timeline roughly twenty years forward into the Cold War. Fenton is older, the tone is graver, and the globe-trotting goes behind the Iron Curtain and beyond. Lost Horizon 2 cycles you between multiple playable characters, including Fenton, his daughter Gwen, and a character named Anna, with each chapter locking you into a different perspective. The inventory mechanics and object-interaction loop carry over from the first game, and both titles include a built-in hint system and chapter walkthroughs so you can dial up assistance instead of getting stuck cold on an obscure puzzle. That accessibility is a genuine strength for anyone newer to the genre. The honest caveat is that Lost Horizon 2 lands noticeably below its predecessor in almost every measure players have flagged. Community feedback points to uneven puzzle logic, some items that go nowhere, occasional bugs in late-game sequences, and a story that loses the charm and romantic tension of the original. Where the first feels like a confident, well-produced adventure, the second feels like a game that ran out of runway before it ran out of content. Still, taken as a bundle, the package makes sense. The first game alone is a solidly crafted classic-style adventure with strong production values and an entertaining pulp-thriller story. The second adds several more hours in the same world even if the quality dips. If you bounced off the genre before because puzzles went illogical or hints were absent, both games here are gentler than the old school. If you are a point-and-click veteran hoping for a consistent two-game arc, keep expectations calibrated for one great entry and one serviceable one. Alex, Scout Team

Lost Horizon Double Pack
Single PlayerBird ViewAdventure

Lost Horizon Double Pack

Oct 2, 2015Animation Arts GmbHDeep Silver
GamerScout Says

Two point-and-click adventures in one package: a well-loved 1930s globe-trotter and its Cold War sequel. The first is the stronger game; the second is rougher around the edges but still worth a look for genre fans.

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About Lost Horizon Double Pack

The Lost Horizon Double Pack bundles two point-and-click adventure games from Animation Arts, the studio behind the Secret Files series. The first game drops you into 1936, casting you as Fenton Paddock, a former British soldier turned smuggler who gets pulled into a hunt for a friend gone missing in Tibet. That thread unravels across three continents, tangling with Nazi occult schemes and exotic, carefully hand-painted locations. It is classic birds-eye adventure design: hunt for interactive objects in each scene, gather key items, combine them in your inventory, and think your way past logic puzzles to push the story forward. The pacing is steady, the writing has genuine wit, and the overall reception from players has been strongly positive. The second game shifts the timeline roughly twenty years forward into the Cold War. Fenton is older, the tone is graver, and the globe-trotting goes behind the Iron Curtain and beyond. Lost Horizon 2 cycles you between multiple playable characters, including Fenton, his daughter Gwen, and a character named Anna, with each chapter locking you into a different perspective. The inventory mechanics and object-interaction loop carry over from the first game, and both titles include a built-in hint system and chapter walkthroughs so you can dial up assistance instead of getting stuck cold on an obscure puzzle. That accessibility is a genuine strength for anyone newer to the genre. The honest caveat is that Lost Horizon 2 lands noticeably below its predecessor in almost every measure players have flagged. Community feedback points to uneven puzzle logic, some items that go nowhere, occasional bugs in late-game sequences, and a story that loses the charm and romantic tension of the original. Where the first feels like a confident, well-produced adventure, the second feels like a game that ran out of runway before it ran out of content. Still, taken as a bundle, the package makes sense. The first game alone is a solidly crafted classic-style adventure with strong production values and an entertaining pulp-thriller story. The second adds several more hours in the same world even if the quality dips. If you bounced off the genre before because puzzles went illogical or hints were absent, both games here are gentler than the old school. If you are a point-and-click veteran hoping for a consistent two-game arc, keep expectations calibrated for one great entry and one serviceable one. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamPoint-and-ClickInventory PuzzlesMulti-ChapterHint SystemCold War Setting1930s SettingGlobe-TrottingBird's-Eye ViewClassic Adventure

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
DirectX 9 2 GB
Processor
Intel Core i5 or 100 %
System requirements
Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Animation Arts GmbH
Publisher
Deep Silver
Release Date
Oct 2, 2015

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