
THE SILENT AGE CHAPTER 10 FREE
After ending last year's impressive free first episode on a cliffhanger, Danish developer House on Fire is back with the second (and concluding) commercial installment of The Silent Age, available now for iOS and Android.


And a janitor named Joe who's quietly getting on with trying to save the world, cleaning up the biggest mess of his career. Time of free love, bandanas, mustaches and bell-bottoms. This review is based on the original iOS release.Īh, the 1970s.
THE SILENT AGE CHAPTER 10 FULL
Having completed this charmingly designed taster, you won't begrudge them the income.Note: Since time of writing, this game has been enhanced and re-released on PC and iOS with HD graphics and full voice-overs. You can donate to help make that a reality, although House on Fire's website says that the next episode will be a paid app rather than free. The Silent Age won't take long to complete, and when you do you're presented with an advert for the second - and final - instalment in Joe's tale. Locations are rich in detail without being overwhelming, and the creepy moments are well handled. The game also looks lovely, with a bold visual style in which Joe's red boiler suit contrasts beautifully with the sterile 1970s and the washed-out future. In the tradition of all great adventure game heroes, Joe has a fun quip for even the least likely item combination you try. You can make a donation towards its development.


We're never allowed to run ahead of Joe as the story unfolds at its own tightly controlled pace, with only occasional bursts of exposition and several subtle clues dropped in your path as you concentrate on more immediate problems: escaping from buildings, opening locked doors, finding where our mystery man lives and repairing a broken down ambulance to reach him. It's a neat premise, leaving the player with a clear long-term goal but little idea of what it actually means. With that, he hands you a tiny handheld device and dies. Apparently the fate of mankind itself is at stake. With his last breath, the man insists he's from the future and implores you to find his younger self and prevent him from travelling through time in the first place. There's blood all over the floor and a dying man hiding in a locked room. After performing a few mundane tasks, you're sent to clean up the basement laboratory where things take a darker turn. You start the game as Joe, a hapless janitor working in a shady government installation in 1972. An elegantly constructed time-hopping adventure, its only weakness is a fondness for puzzles that are just a little too easy. Stylish and simple, there's much to recommend in this free episodic point-and-click game from Danish indie studio House on Fire.
