![]() ![]() ![]() If you know what you are doing and aren’t having trouble with the puzzles, you can complete Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons relatively quickly in about three hours. The game is split into a prologue, seven numbered chapters, and then an epilogue after, though these are seamless if you are playing through the game in one go, which is the recommended way to play this game. The two bumper buttons are also used to move around the camera, though the solid camera included in the game rarely needs manual movement. Moving the analog stick on that half moves that brother around and the respective trigger button interacts with different people and objects. The left half of the controller, or the left Joy-Con, is used to control the older brother while the right half of the controller, or the right Joy-Con, is used to control the younger brother. The gameplay found in Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons is based on controlling both of the brothers simultaneously with the use of one controller, or two in the case of the Nintendo Switch if you are playing with two Joy-Cons rather then a Pro Controller. Considering the visual style, there is not any sort of visual downgrade found on the Nintendo Switch version at all compared to past releases, along with performance that seemed to be on par with previous releases as well. ![]() Is this maze of suburbia all in their head, or are their sinister forces at play? You’ll just have to watch to find out.With the fantasy type setting, the game features fantastical and colorful visuals that would feel right at home in a series like The Legend of Zelda or Fable. A labyrinthine nightmare, Eisenberg and Poots flourish as Tom and Gemma, an innocent young couple that slowly begin losing their minds and overall grip on reality, especially once a newborn baby arrives - appearing out of the clear blue. After Tom and Gemma (Jesse Eisenberg and Imogen Poots) travel to the mysterious development of Yonder with their oddball realtor, Martin (Jonathan Aris), the agent seemingly disappears. That’s where director/co-writer Lorcan Finnegan’s Vivarium gets started. ![]() As if closing costs, inspections, and the pains of moving day weren’t hell enough, imagine being trapped in a neighborhood where all the houses are exactly the same - and there’s no escape. Ah yes, the joys of buying your first home. ![]()
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