
The dialog isn't great but has its charms, and the voice acting is suitably cheesy and a bit awkward, but cute and enthusiastic. There's something everyone can appreciate here. It's silly, but so heartfelt, oozes personality, and it's not a kids-only game. It's weird and wonderful in a delightfully French way (think Rayman or Beyond Good & Evil).

Soon enough you become a wizard and learn spells, then travel to distant planets. Funfrock (not making this up), but then a freak storm and an alien invasion sets a new adventure in motion. Twinsen is taking a break from adventuring after defeating the evil Dr. You play as Twinsen, who coincidentally lives on a planet called Twin sun (because it has two suns), populated by anthropomorphic talking rabbits and elephants. You travel back and forth between different islands, each of them fully open world, solving puzzles and collecting new items and abilities.
#Little big adventure 2 ost full
The gameplay consists of navigating full 3D environments outdoors and isometric stages indoors, primarily being an adventure and puzzle game, but has a couple of RPG elements and a good deal of combat (throwing, shooting and melee). LBA 2 is a sequel to a game I'd never played (and still haven't actually).

This one is a much more age-appropriate game I played as a kid, and it's essentially my Legend of Zelda. Growing up mostly on PC, I didn't play a lot of the games that kids of the time grew up with, and most of my first games were relatively more "mature" games on my dad's PC. Most people haven't heard of this game from 1997, and though it received good reviews at the time, it seemed to fade into obscurity soon after.
