Best Horror Games On Itch.io – July 2026
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Your companion guide during battles.
Tag: Adventure
Alabama Smith in Escape from Pompeii Review
A good story helps move a point and click adventure forward, letting gamers rely on their own intelligence to decide what to do next. In Alabama Smith in Escape from Pompeii, however, even the most experienced gamers will hit dead spots that require multiple hints. Some puzzles are satisfying, but overall gameplay can be frustrating owing to a story that jumps between too many instructions and none at all.Alabama Smith starts out with two interesting characters and a good idea: a way to give additional guidance in an adventure. Alabama is a twentysomething college student. The school sends him on a summer course to Europe where he meets the daughter of an archaeologist and they set off on a quest for a mysterious amulet.Adventure Chronicles: The Search For Lost Treasure Preview
By Erin Bell
After narrowly surviving an earthquake with her daughter in Escape the Museum, scientist Susan Anderson decides to take advantage of a unique opportunity to travel the world while trying to unearth some of the earth's most priceless hidden treasures that had been lost to history in Adventure Chronicles: The Search For Lost Treasure.We can't tell you much about this hidden object adventure, but we do know that there will be 30 levels with 5 treasures to find, and, according to Gogii, unique "geo-cache" side missions. Sounds interesting!Mark and Mandi’s Love Story Review
It's a bit early for Valentine's Day, but who couldn't use a little romance? Mark and Mandi's Love Story is a light-hearted "spot the difference" game that includes lots of simple mini-games like shuffled-image jigsaws and memory games. It's a bit rough around the edges, and isn't particularly challenging to start, but it's the sort of game that grows on you as you play.Mystery P.I. – The New York Fortune Review
The Mystery P.I. franchise continues with Mystery P.I. - The New York Fortune, the third game. This one feels like a twin to the previous game, Mystery P.I. - The Vegas Heist (which didn't exactly excite), except that it lives and breathes New York.The story sounds similar to the original. Instead of an older woman hiring you to find her ticket to her fortune, a billionaire's family hires you to find a hidden fortune within 17 hours or else it goes to the cat and dog. Upon success, the family will reward you with a fake $25 million. Obviously, the estate contains a vast fortune. That's all there is to the story until you wrap it up in the end.Mystery Stories: Berlin Nights Review
In case you haven't noticed, the popular "hidden object game" genre has evolved in three main areas: better stories, higher production values and by weaving in adventure game-like puzzles to add more depth and purpose to your work.Mystery Stories: Berlin Nights succeeds on all these fronts to deliver a lengthy and memorable game experience that's well worth the investment. It's not a flawless puzzler, but it gets a lot right.Nancy Drew Dossier: Lights, Camera, Curses! Review
By David Stone
Her Interactive's Nancy Drew series is known for having games that are well-made, well-written and well-acted, and contain some good head-scratching puzzles. After 19 games, the developer is taking Nancy Drew to another exotic locale: the hidden object genre.The first game in the new Nancy Drew Dosser series, and the first game designed specifically with the PC download market in mind, Lights, Camera Curses! diverts significantly from its point-and-click roots, but keeps enough in common with the first series to make it feel both fresh and familiar.Tropical Dream: Underwater Odyssey Preview
By Joel Brodie
Tropical Dream: Underwater Odyssey is about a girl named Megan who wants to build a house in a tropical paradise. To earn money, she dives deep into the reefs to take underwater pictures of fishes and sell the pictures to tourists.Herod’s Lost Tomb Review
Imagine you're visiting your Aunt, an archaeologist. "Look for a bottle," she says. You scratch through dirt with a paintbrush, uncovering something. "This?" "No. Keep looking." You try again. And again. Everything is dustry gray or tan and looks similar. At the fifth nearly identical ceramic object, she says, "That's it. Now look for a pot." That's basically the experience you'll have with the new hidden object game Herod's Lost Tomb.