Compare The Whispered World Special Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Daedalic Entertainment. Published by Daedalic Entertainment. Released on 5/6/2014. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Indie.

A melancholic clown, a shape-shifting caterpillar, and hand-painted backdrops that belong in a gallery - Sadwick's world is worth visiting, rough edges and all.

I have a soft spot for games that look like someone poured their whole heart into a sketchbook and then somehow shipped it. The Whispered World sits firmly in that category. Daedalic's point-and-click adventure drops you into Silentia, a dream-like fantasy world, as Sadwick - a perpetually glum circus clown whose recurring nightmares turn out to be prophecy rather than anxiety. The setup sounds quirky, and it is, but there is genuine emotional weight lurking under the melancholy clown makeup once the story finds its footing. The art is the first thing that hits you, and it hits hard. Every background is a hand-painted scene dense with ambient life - smoke curling from chimneys, waterfalls catching light, strange creatures half-hidden in forest brush. Reviewers and players alike consistently single out the visuals as the game's undisputed high point, and they are right to do so. The orchestral soundtrack follows the same philosophy: unhurried, slightly haunted, the kind of score that makes you pause and listen rather than click past it. The Special Edition bundles in the full soundtrack alongside developer audio commentary from writers Jan Poki Muller-Michaelis and Marco Hullen, which is activated via an on-screen button rather than an intrusive menu toggle - a small but thoughtful design choice that adventure fans will appreciate. Sadwick's companion Spot, an oversized cheerful caterpillar, is the mechanical heart of the puzzle design. Spot can transform into several distinct forms - a round bouncy shape, a fire form, and others unlocked as you progress - and most of the game's better puzzles lean on creative use of those transformations alongside a standard inventory-combination system. Pressing Space highlights interactive objects on screen, which keeps pixel-hunting frustration manageable. The puzzles range from genuinely clever to bafflingly oblique; the logic occasionally snaps in ways that feel more like developer telepathy than actual deduction, so a walkthrough tab open in the background is not surrender, it is pragmatism. The game spans four chapters across roughly eight to fifteen hours depending on how stubbornly you resist hints. Where the game divides opinion sharply is Sadwick himself. He is morose, verbose, and self-deprecating to a degree that either reads as a genuinely well-written anti-hero or an exhausting companion depending on your tolerance. The English voice acting has drawn consistent criticism over the years - it is nasal and occasionally cloying - and a handful of audio sync errors crop up in the Special Edition. Players who lean into the original German track with English subtitles report a noticeably more comfortable experience. Story-wise, the payoff is worth the patience: the ending takes a quiet, unexpected turn that reframes everything before it with surprising resonance. This is a game for people who love the creaky, logic-bending tradition of LucasArts and early Sierra adventures, and who value atmosphere and handcraft above streamlined usability. If you bounced off it because of Sadwick's voice, try the German audio. If you love Deponia or The Night of the Rabbit, this is essential connective tissue in Daedalic's catalog. Go in with a guide bookmarked and your patience calibrated, and Silentia will reward you. Kai, Scout Team

The Whispered World Special Edition
AdventureIndie

The Whispered World Special Edition

May 6, 2014Daedalic Entertainment
GamerScout Says

A melancholic clown, a shape-shifting caterpillar, and hand-painted backdrops that belong in a gallery - Sadwick's world is worth visiting, rough edges and all.

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About The Whispered World Special Edition

I have a soft spot for games that look like someone poured their whole heart into a sketchbook and then somehow shipped it. The Whispered World sits firmly in that category. Daedalic's point-and-click adventure drops you into Silentia, a dream-like fantasy world, as Sadwick - a perpetually glum circus clown whose recurring nightmares turn out to be prophecy rather than anxiety. The setup sounds quirky, and it is, but there is genuine emotional weight lurking under the melancholy clown makeup once the story finds its footing. The art is the first thing that hits you, and it hits hard. Every background is a hand-painted scene dense with ambient life - smoke curling from chimneys, waterfalls catching light, strange creatures half-hidden in forest brush. Reviewers and players alike consistently single out the visuals as the game's undisputed high point, and they are right to do so. The orchestral soundtrack follows the same philosophy: unhurried, slightly haunted, the kind of score that makes you pause and listen rather than click past it. The Special Edition bundles in the full soundtrack alongside developer audio commentary from writers Jan Poki Muller-Michaelis and Marco Hullen, which is activated via an on-screen button rather than an intrusive menu toggle - a small but thoughtful design choice that adventure fans will appreciate. Sadwick's companion Spot, an oversized cheerful caterpillar, is the mechanical heart of the puzzle design. Spot can transform into several distinct forms - a round bouncy shape, a fire form, and others unlocked as you progress - and most of the game's better puzzles lean on creative use of those transformations alongside a standard inventory-combination system. Pressing Space highlights interactive objects on screen, which keeps pixel-hunting frustration manageable. The puzzles range from genuinely clever to bafflingly oblique; the logic occasionally snaps in ways that feel more like developer telepathy than actual deduction, so a walkthrough tab open in the background is not surrender, it is pragmatism. The game spans four chapters across roughly eight to fifteen hours depending on how stubbornly you resist hints. Where the game divides opinion sharply is Sadwick himself. He is morose, verbose, and self-deprecating to a degree that either reads as a genuinely well-written anti-hero or an exhausting companion depending on your tolerance. The English voice acting has drawn consistent criticism over the years - it is nasal and occasionally cloying - and a handful of audio sync errors crop up in the Special Edition. Players who lean into the original German track with English subtitles report a noticeably more comfortable experience. Story-wise, the payoff is worth the patience: the ending takes a quiet, unexpected turn that reframes everything before it with surprising resonance. This is a game for people who love the creaky, logic-bending tradition of LucasArts and early Sierra adventures, and who value atmosphere and handcraft above streamlined usability. If you bounced off it because of Sadwick's voice, try the German audio. If you love Deponia or The Night of the Rabbit, this is essential connective tissue in Daedalic's catalog. Go in with a guide bookmarked and your patience calibrated, and Silentia will reward you. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Ghibli-InspiredDeveloper CommentaryInventory PuzzlesCompanion MechanicClassic P&C LogicMelancholic ToneOrchestral Score

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 6 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows Vista/7
Memory
1 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
1800 MB available space
Graphics
OpenGL 2.0 compatible with 256 MB RAM, Shader Model 2.0 Support (Shared Memory is not recommended)
Processor
2.5 GHz (Single Core) or 2 GHz (Dual Core)
Sound Card
DirectX 9.0c compatible

Recommended

OS
Windows Vista/7/8-32bit
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
1800 MB available space
Graphics
OpenGL 2.0 compatible with 512 MB RAM, Shader Model 2.0 Support (Shared Memory is not recommended)
Processor
2.5 GHz (Single Core) or 2 GHz (Dual Core)
Sound Card
DirectX 9.0c compatible

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Game Info

Developer
Daedalic Entertainment
Publisher
Daedalic Entertainment
Release Date
May 6, 2014

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What platforms is The Whispered World Special Edition available on?

The Whispered World Special Edition is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was The Whispered World Special Edition released?

The Whispered World Special Edition was released on 6 May 2014.

Who developed The Whispered World Special Edition?

The Whispered World Special Edition was developed by Daedalic Entertainment.