Instruction manuals died out as video games introduced tutorials instead. But now games such as Tunic and The Banished Vault are bringing them back
Back in the 8bit home micro days, we used to read the manuals all the time. Mainly because the games took so long to load from cassette.
I distinctly remember the Microprose manuals for their simulation games when I had a 16bit computer, I felt like I could master the real vehicle after looking through those.
helloharu@lemmy.world 9 months ago
Tunic uses the idea of a video game manual in such a wonderful way. Its not just a “hey this is what the buttons are, the interface is and a couple of character bios” kind of manual. The devs have made it a core part of the games experience as it guides you through literally the whole game and its secrets with even telling you that’s what it’s doing.
If you’ve not played it you need to experience it for yourself, it’s brilliant.
littletranspunk@lemmus.org 9 months ago
It’s pretty much the only game where saying how to play, beyond basic movement and attacking, is spoilers because of how they implemented it. Definitely worth the play
chunkystyles@sopuli.xyz 9 months ago
The game is so unique, and its puzzles so novel, I don’t it could be replicated successfully.