Compare Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Shaman Games Studio. Published by HH-Games. Released on 9/17/2014. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

A creaky but genuinely atmospheric hidden-object adventure with a cursed lighthouse, hand-drawn scenes, and a dual-perspective bonus chapter worth sticking around for.

I have a soft spot for the kind of hidden-object game that commits fully to its gloom, and Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light commits. The island you explore across its static, hand-drawn scenes is intentionally bleak: no tropical warmth, no comforting greenery, just storm-wracked coastlines, a graveyard of shipwrecks, and a lighthouse with a keeper whose sanity is very much in question. That specific, narrow mood is what the game does best, and if you step into it willing to meet it on its own terms, it holds. The structure is classic HOPA - Hidden Object Puzzle Adventure - which means you move point-and-click style through a branching chain of static panels, picking up inventory items, slotting them into environmental puzzles, and periodically dropping into a cluttered scene to find a list of twelve or so objects hidden among the debris. Two difficulty modes are available: Regular (sparkles on active zones, faster hint recharge) and Expert (no handholding, slower skip timers). Neither mode reinvents the wheel, but Expert does generate some genuine pixel-hunting tension, particularly in the bonus chapter where a few objects are tucked frustratingly close to the HUD border. The hidden-object scenes themselves run each location twice, with a fresh object list the second time around to keep the clutter honest. What distinguishes the Collector's Edition specifically is the dual-perspective bonus chapter. The main game follows Jane as she pieces together what happened on the island. The bonus flips to Mike's viewpoint after he gets dragged away, letting you replay several familiar locations from the other side of the abduction. It is a modest structural idea, but it works: seeing the same set dressing re-framed adds a small amount of genuine narrative weight to an otherwise thin plot. Some of the puzzles tucked into the bonus chapter are actually more inventive than those in the main game, which feels like a small injustice but is worth knowing going in. The integrated strategy guide is there if you get stuck, though it does slightly undercut the mystery. The problems are real and not minor. The game has poor optimization for modern PCs, a criticism that appears consistently across player feedback, and no in-game map means backtracking between screens without waypoint guidance. The ship graveyard setting - which should be the visual centrepiece - ends up underwritten, with silhouetted frigates on the horizon doing most of the atmospheric heavy lifting while the foreground scenes feel a little sparse. The story around the lighthouse keeper and the ancient symbols never quite delivers the payoff its setup promises, and some players will feel the whole thing wraps too abruptly. Steam sits at a modest 74% positive from a small review sample, which tracks: this is a genre-competent, mood-committed game that stops well short of exceptional. For casual adventure regulars who already know they like this genre, it is a comfortable few hours in a genuinely creepy setting with a soundtrack that earns its atmosphere. For anyone new to hidden-object games, the genre conventions here are explained nowhere in-game, so expect to feel slightly lost in the first twenty minutes before the rhythm clicks. If you have no patience for pixel-hunting or thin plots, the island will feel like exactly the cold, unwelcoming rock it looks like. But if a cursed lighthouse and a graveyard of ships sounds like your kind of evening, Sea Legends earns that mood honestly. Kai, Scout Team

Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition
AdventureCasualIndie

Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition

Sep 17, 2014Shaman Games StudioHH-Games
GamerScout Says

A creaky but genuinely atmospheric hidden-object adventure with a cursed lighthouse, hand-drawn scenes, and a dual-perspective bonus chapter worth sticking around for.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition

I have a soft spot for the kind of hidden-object game that commits fully to its gloom, and Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light commits. The island you explore across its static, hand-drawn scenes is intentionally bleak: no tropical warmth, no comforting greenery, just storm-wracked coastlines, a graveyard of shipwrecks, and a lighthouse with a keeper whose sanity is very much in question. That specific, narrow mood is what the game does best, and if you step into it willing to meet it on its own terms, it holds. The structure is classic HOPA - Hidden Object Puzzle Adventure - which means you move point-and-click style through a branching chain of static panels, picking up inventory items, slotting them into environmental puzzles, and periodically dropping into a cluttered scene to find a list of twelve or so objects hidden among the debris. Two difficulty modes are available: Regular (sparkles on active zones, faster hint recharge) and Expert (no handholding, slower skip timers). Neither mode reinvents the wheel, but Expert does generate some genuine pixel-hunting tension, particularly in the bonus chapter where a few objects are tucked frustratingly close to the HUD border. The hidden-object scenes themselves run each location twice, with a fresh object list the second time around to keep the clutter honest. What distinguishes the Collector's Edition specifically is the dual-perspective bonus chapter. The main game follows Jane as she pieces together what happened on the island. The bonus flips to Mike's viewpoint after he gets dragged away, letting you replay several familiar locations from the other side of the abduction. It is a modest structural idea, but it works: seeing the same set dressing re-framed adds a small amount of genuine narrative weight to an otherwise thin plot. Some of the puzzles tucked into the bonus chapter are actually more inventive than those in the main game, which feels like a small injustice but is worth knowing going in. The integrated strategy guide is there if you get stuck, though it does slightly undercut the mystery. The problems are real and not minor. The game has poor optimization for modern PCs, a criticism that appears consistently across player feedback, and no in-game map means backtracking between screens without waypoint guidance. The ship graveyard setting - which should be the visual centrepiece - ends up underwritten, with silhouetted frigates on the horizon doing most of the atmospheric heavy lifting while the foreground scenes feel a little sparse. The story around the lighthouse keeper and the ancient symbols never quite delivers the payoff its setup promises, and some players will feel the whole thing wraps too abruptly. Steam sits at a modest 74% positive from a small review sample, which tracks: this is a genre-competent, mood-committed game that stops well short of exceptional. For casual adventure regulars who already know they like this genre, it is a comfortable few hours in a genuinely creepy setting with a soundtrack that earns its atmosphere. For anyone new to hidden-object games, the genre conventions here are explained nowhere in-game, so expect to feel slightly lost in the first twenty minutes before the rhythm clicks. If you have no patience for pixel-hunting or thin plots, the island will feel like exactly the cold, unwelcoming rock it looks like. But if a cursed lighthouse and a graveyard of ships sounds like your kind of evening, Sea Legends earns that mood honestly. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5HOPAAtmospheric HorrorDual PerspectivePixel HuntingStatic ScenesPoint-and-ClickLighthouse MysteryDifficulty Modes

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Platinum

Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP / Windows Vista / Windows 7 / 8 / 10 / 11
Memory
1024 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
795 MB available space
Graphics
256 MB
Processor
1.5 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX compatible sound device

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 / 8 / 10 / 11
Memory
1024 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
256 MB
Processor
1.5 GHz or higher
Sound Card
DirectX compatible sound device

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Shaman Games Studio
Publisher
HH-Games
Release Date
Sep 17, 2014

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Price History

2026-06-070.77(lowest)

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Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition is available on PC.

When was Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition released?

Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition was released on 17 September 2014.

Who developed Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition?

Sea Legends: Phantasmal Light Collector's Edition was developed by Shaman Games Studio and published by HH-Games.