

If, like me, you’ve no knowledge of it, then you’re in for a painful amount of matches throughout. Much like chess, they all possess different movement rules and the ultimate aim is to capture the opposition’s lion. Worse than that however, is the overuse of a Japanese chess-like board game.ĭōbutsu Shōgi, also known internationally as ‘Let’s Catch the Lion!’, is a kid’s board game where each player has four tiles – a chick, an elephant, a giraffe, and a lion. This is when the monotony can creep in though, with certain puzzles repeated in order to reach the alternate pathways. Eventually you’ll reach a point at which a whole host of other rooms are on the agenda, along with more branching routes. In the early stages, completing a single room leads to an ending scene, before being thrown back to the start to tackle a different room.
SAW 2 LIGHTS OUT PUZZLE SERIES
Other ideas involve algebraic calculations to balance the scales, a rather dangerous version of Cut the Rope, repeating a series of sounds heard, and more. I like the variety, for you could end up getting Katia to flip levers to safely re-route a toy train set or press buttons to switch all the lights off on a board, akin to the old Lights Out game. There’s no hand holding whatsoever, hence figuring out the problem is as much of a conundrum as the eventual solution. Moving on to the puzzles, and there’s one per room for you to solve. Last Labyrinth -Lucidity Lost- Katia awaits confirmation
