Angela Young 2: Escape the Dreamscape
August 26, 2009
OS: Windows XP/Vista
CPU: 1.0 GHz or faster Processor
RAM: 512 MB
Hard Drive: 93 MB
Can Angela find her missing cat Felix? Help the young girl who is stuck in her dreams in her mission.
Angela Young 2: Escape the Dreamscape review
The premise of the game Angela Young is a bit like Alice in Wonderland, in which Angela is a young girl who is stuck up in a dream, trying to find her missing cat Felix. As a hidden object game, it has nothing new to offer on the game play front. With an easy array of mini games, you are game play is timed and there is no relaxed mode. Through the course of the game you will have to progress through various places and travel through dangerous mazes. Not only that the character is stranded in a mystical place called Dreamscape, where she has to trudge along to find her missing cat Felix. Along the way, you will be able to explore the hidden object scenes and solve intriguing puzzles along the course of the game.
As far as the hints are concerned, they are always rechargeable. This helps you skip and move on in the game. The ambience is dreamlike and mystical. It in many ways, adds to the replay value of the game. The background score is another highpoint in this game. The ambience and the languid background score is another element that adds to the languid pace of this game.
Overall, Angela Young is a game that has an interesting set of objects that not only make the game engaging, but the neatly arranged set of games makes it one game with an intrinsic replay value. This apart the graphics are great and enhances the overall package of this game.
You will have to remove multiple objects in succession. These are randomly placed with four canes or five hats that you really get the hang of the game. This game in many ways is like the usual hidden object games, where you will have to click on objects randomly.
However, all those who didn’t like first version of this game, you can definitely download the demo version. It’s highly recommended. There is a sense of wide-open spaces and the 12 out of 37 levels. If you exit, you will have to begin from the start. It does have both relaxed and timed modes, and a refilling hint bar which can also be used to skip puzzles (although they’re quite easy). Background music is soft and relaxing. There is no voice acting. Again, not bad, but not in the same league as some of the other current releases we’ve been enjoying (Poe, Tarot Card, Princess Isabella).
Conclusion: Overall Angela Young is a decently packaged game that goes on at a languid pace. It is mundane at a certain level. However, at the game play level, it has nothing new to offer. Not only that as the plot level too, this is the similar run of the mill stuff and is childish and cliched. The initial version of the game is rather tacky and uninteresting and may be a dampner for many who ideally want to play this game to get a hang of it. The demo version is nevertheless pretty good and draws your attention instantaneously.

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