Batman Vs. Ninja Turtles Gets New Toys: Are They Worth It?

Zelda: Link’s Awakening Has A Claw Machine And It’s Kind Of Evil

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The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening is now on Nintendo Switch in all its remake-y glory. One of the coolest (or weirdest) things about Link’s Awakening is that it features various Mushroom Kingdom characters, like Goombas, Chain Chomps, and Yoshi in doll form. The Yoshi doll is of particular significance, as it kicks off a classic Zelda-style item trading quest. Or it would, if you could actually get it.

In Mabe Village, there’s a building that houses the “trendy game,” a UFO catcher mini-game which you can play for a handful of Rupees. There are a lot of great prizes in there, but only one will literally jump out of the claw as if vexing you is its job.

In the video below, our own Jake Dekker compiled all his attempts that were foiled by the Yoshi doll. At the suggestion of various GameSpot employees, he has added lovely Yoshi sound effects for, well, effect. There were further attempts before he actually got the Yoshi doll.

Anyway, Link’s Awakening is a great game despite some claw machine frustrations. In our review of the remake, Managing Editor Peter Brown wrote, “Though the remake has a couple of blemishes, it’s still an easy game to recommend. People speak of Link’s Awakening as the secret best Zelda game. That’s a tough call to make, but it’s definitely one of the best. If you haven’t touched a classic Zelda game in a while, Link’s Awakening will almost instantly transport you back to the ’90s. It’s simple, in many ways, but the orchestrated journey still conveys a sense of adventure, and this new version is without question the best way to experience it. And more than anything else, it will put a smile on your face. Remakes are a dime a dozen nowadays and often easy to overlook. Don’t make that mistake with Link’s Awakening.”

If you get stuck in Link’s Awakening, don’t worry! We don’t have a “trendy game” guide, but we do have a guide to the secret seashell locations, another guide for heart piece locations, and a more general tips guide if you’re looking for something more spoiler-free.

PlanetSide Arena – Official Launch Gameplay Trailer

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Apex Legends Season 3: Start Date, Crypto, And Everything We Know

Apex Legends is in the final weeks of its second season, so if you want to earn all the exclusive goodies tied to its battle pass, you’re quickly running out of time. For those already looking ahead, Season 3 is about to begin. Like Season 2, it’s expected to go on for several months and will see a bunch of new content added to Apex Legends.

Below, we detail all the information we have on Apex Legends Season 3, codenamed Meltdown. Every season of Apex Legends brings with it a new battle pass, playable character, and exclusive cosmetic unlocks. Though the first season wasn’t all that impressive, other than the addition of the adrenaline junkie Octane, Season 2 has been a wonderful boon for Respawn’s Titanfall-themed battle royale game–adding the static defender Wattson, a substantial map transformation, two Legend-themed map takeover events, worthwhile battle pass rewards, two limited-time modes, and ranked play. It’s certainly enough to inspire confidence for what to expect in Season 3.

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When Does Season 3 Start?

Apex Legends: Season 3 is scheduled to begin on October 1. Given that Season 1 began in March and continued through to June, and Season 2 started in July and will continue until the end of September, it’s probable that Season 3 will also be about three months long. Respawn hasn’t announced an official end date yet, but Season 3 will likely continue until around the holiday season in late December.

Who Is Season 3’s New Legend?

First teased during Season 1 and appearing in-game but unplayable in Season 2, Crypto has been confirmed to be the new playable character coming to Apex Legends in Season 3. This hacker’s abilities still remain unknown, although a cinematic short of his backstory does seem to corroborate datamine leaks that point to his passive, tactical, and ultimate abilities being tied to his gadgets.

According to the leaks, Crypto’s tactical ability allows him to summon a remote-controlled drone that can open doors, loot bins, and pick up teammates’ respawn banners. His passive ability allows both him and his teammates to see targets marked with his drone. And his ultimate? It’s an EMP grenade that sends out a pulse that does massive shield damage and slows enemies. Supposedly it’s like the effect caused by walking through one of Wattson’s Perimeter Security fences but on a much larger scale. Again, none of this has been confirmed, but these abilities do match the skills Crypto uses in his cinematic story trailer.

What Is Season 3’s New Weapon?

Season 1 saw the addition of the Havoc, an energy assault rifle that could transition into an energy light machine gun or sniper rifle depending on which hop-up you equip to it. In Season 2, the L-Star was added–providing a brand-new legendary light machine gun for players to look for in supply drops. Season 3 will be adding a new weapon as well, one that should be familiar to fans of Titanfall and Titanfall 2.

The Charge Rifle is the first anti-titan weapon to be added to Apex Legends. It’s a powerful laser cannon that must be charged before it can fire, but it has a tremendous range. In the Titanfall games, it’s the primary weapon used by pilots looking to take down titans from a distance, but it can just as easily be used as a sniper rifle against other pilots–as it downs infantry in a single shot. Respawn hasn’t released exact details about Apex Legends’ version of the Charge Rifle, but if it’s anything like its Titanfall counterpart, it will prove to be one of the strongest sniper rifle-like weapons in the battle royale game.

What Is Season 3’s Map Change?

Respawn hasn’t revealed any information concerning map changes coming to Apex Legends’ King’s Canyon in Season 3. However, there may have been a hint in one of the teasers for Crypto before his official announcement.

In the Singh Labs–added during the limited-time Voidwalker event which saw Wraith’s town takeover installed in King’s Canyon–you can discover Crypto in-game. Upon spotting you, he runs off, but not before you have a chance to briefly see what he’s been working on. It looks like he’s trying to connect the massive void portal that’s in the Singh Labs to a place called World’s End.

Granted, Respawn seems to enjoy teasing new Apex Legends content months before it actually releases in-game (Octane is in one of the announcement trailers released on the game’s launch day, for example, and Crypto has been teased since Season 1). So World’s End could just as easily be a clue to something larger we can expect later–like a whole new map. Or maybe it’s something else entirely. Or maybe it’s nothing. We’ll have to wait and see.

What Comes In Season’s 3 Battle Pass?

Respawn hasn’t detailed the exact contents of Season 3’s battle pass, other than that it will include over 100 items–just like Season 1 and 2’s pass. Although Season 1 didn’t have a very impressive battle pass, Season 2’s included cool-looking emotes you could pull off while dropping in mid-air, music packs, and additional pieces of lore for each character. It was also easier (and thus more fun) to complete, thanks to the addition of daily and weekly challenges that encouraged you to play with characters and fight in areas you might not be accustomed to.

How Much Will Season 3 Cost?

Although the season itself is a free download that all players will receive on October 1, some of the content included in Season 3 will require you spend in-game currency. Specifically, both the battle pass and Crypto, the new character, will cost money. Everything else though–like the map changes and new weapon–is free.

If Respawn holds true to tradition, then the battle pass should cost 950 Apex Coins, which is about $9.50 USD. If you’ve completed most of the Season 2 battle pass, you should already have that much saved up. If not, you’ll need to either buy the Apex Coins with real-world money or earn them by leveling up and unlocking loot boxes.

Respawn has previously priced new characters at 12,000 Legend Tokens / 750 Apex Coins, which is about $7.50 USD, so Crypto will most likely be the same. If you’re like me and you’ve been steadily playing Apex Legends throughout Season 2, then you should have almost triple the number of Legend Tokens you need. You probably have more Legend Tokens than you know what to do with. Otherwise, like the battle pass, you’ll have to drop real-world money or unlock loot boxes to earn enough Apex Coins.

How Long Does It Take To Finish The Legend Of Zelda: Link’s Awakening On Switch?

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Delivering a little one-two punch, Nintendo has released two big products today: the new Nintendo Switch Lite, and The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening. The new Zelda game turned out to be a great revival of a game that’s otherwise been isolated to the old Game Boy and Game Boy Color handhelds, making this new release the best way to experience the unusual and delightful adventure set outside the Kingdom of Hyrule.

If the game is new to you, and your most recent Zelda experience is Breath of the Wild (one of the best Switch games around), then you might want to know how much game there is to Link’s Awakening. In my experience, I was able to finish the game and obtain roughly half of the collectible seashells and Pieces of Heart in roughly 15 hours–there isn’t a completely accurate clock, so this is going off of my profile’s rough hour count.

For additional context, you can also consider the fact that I don’t have the original game memorized–far from it. If you’re a veteran who knows the game like the back of your hand, then you can expect that hour count to shrink as, by and large, the new Link’s Awakening is a direct copy of the original.

In my review, I thoroughly recommend the game despite having a few minor issues with the technical performance and the new mode, Chamber Dungeons: “Though the remake has a couple of blemishes, it’s still an easy game to recommend. People speak of Link’s Awakening as the secret best Zelda game. That’s a tough call to make, but it’s definitely one of the best. If you haven’t touched a classic Zelda game in a while, Link’s Awakening will almost instantly transport you back to the ’90s. It’s simple, in many ways, but the orchestrated journey still conveys a sense of adventure, and this new version is without question the best way to experience it. And more than anything else, it will put a smile on your face. Remakes are a dime a dozen nowadays and often easy to overlook. Don’t make that mistake with Link’s Awakening.” For a full breakdown of my thoughts, be sure to check out the full Link’s Awakening review.

If you’re already into the game and need some help along the way, be sure to also check out our Link’s Awakening Starter Guide.

Zelda: Link’s Awakening Heart Piece Guide: All Locations

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The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening remake is finally out, allowing a new generation of players to experience a classic Nintendo game with a fresh coat of paint. The graphics aren’t the only new addition, though, as the remake implements several quality-of-life improvements and new collectibles to discover–including more heart pieces.

For those new to Zelda, heart pieces are collectibles seen in most games in the series that allow you to earn a larger health pool for Link. Finding one won’t cut it, though. As these collectibles are pieces of heart, you need to find a set number to complete a full heart and add on to Link’s health. Games have fluctuated between needing four or five pieces, with Link’s Awakening falling into the former camp.

In the original 1993 Link’s Awakening, there were 12 heart pieces to discover. There are 32 in this remake, so you’ve got your work cut out for you even if you’ve played Link’s Awakening before. If you’re having trouble hunting down the pieces, check out the map embedded below. It marks the location of all 32.

For those whose entire Zelda experience begins and ends with Breath of the Wild, keep in mind that only a few games in the franchise actually allow you to tackle the content in any direction you want. From 1991’s A Link to the Past to 2011’s Skyward Sword, the Zelda games–including Link’s Awakening–are very linear. So you will not be able to grab all the heart pieces right from the get-go because you will need to unlock certain items to solve specific puzzles to earn a few of the pieces. To help you out, the heart pieces on our map are numbered in the order they can be acquired.

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In GameSpot’s The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening review, Peter Brown wrote, “Though the remake has a couple of blemishes, it’s still an easy game to recommend. People speak of Link’s Awakening as the secret best Zelda game. That’s a tough call to make, but it’s definitely one of the best. If you haven’t touched a classic Zelda game in a while, Link’s Awakening will almost instantly transport you back to the ’90s. It’s simple, in many ways, but the orchestrated journey still conveys a sense of adventure, and this new version is without question the best way to experience it. And more than anything else, it will put a smile on your face. Remakes are a dime a dozen nowadays and often easy to overlook. Don’t make that mistake with Link’s Awakening.”

Borderlands 3 Director Says More Characters Aren’t Coming

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Borderlands 2 and The Pre-Sequel both added more playable characters post-launch, but don’t expect the same from Borderlands 3. At a Q&A near the end of the Borderlands Show stream, game director Paul Sage ruled out the possibility and explained his reasoning.

According to Sage, Gearbox’s data from previous expansions has shown that most people don’t stick with additional characters, and so the decision was made to differentiate the four main characters through different kinds of builds.

“Probably not. No,” he answered in response to a question about additional characters. “You were asking me earlier about data that we use. And one of the things we actually saw was that once people have picked their character–not everybody, there are no ‘everybodys,’ but a lot of people–stick with that character and want to remain. Furthermore, in Borderlands 3, we really concentrated on diversity within the characters themselves and having a lot of different builds. So that was where we put our eggs, in the basket. Now some people might want more but I don’t think that’s the way to go, not for Borderlands 3.”

He went on to say that in its data collection from previous games, they “might see people play five levels [with a DLC character] and then back to their main.”

Borderlands 2 and The Pre-Sequel both added two additional characters in addition to the four starting classes, for six total. Borderlands 3 again has four starting characters, but introduces active skills for each branch of the skill tree, each with their own modifications. This is likely what Sage was referring to as diversity within the existing characters. If you need a hand picking which one is best for you, refer to our Vault Hunter guide.

The Borderlands Show stream also detailed the Bloody Harvest DLC, a free piece of Halloween content coming in October. And the show also dropped a Shift Code, so be sure to visit our Shift Codes index to claim it and the rest of your Golden Keys.

Hitman 2 DLC Takes Agent 47 To Paradise Next Week

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While Hitman 2 has already received some new content this month in the form of Escalation contracts and weapon unlocks, developer IO Interactive has revealed a new location coming to owners of the stealth-action game’s Gold edition or Expansion pass on PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One. Haven Island, a tropical paradise in the Maldives, will be available on September 24.

Haven Island is a brand-new location that sees Agent 47 assume a fake identity to infiltrate the tropical island resort. The DLC will feature new missions and picks up right after the events of the Milton-Fitzpatrick bank in New York. Haven Island will serve as the conclusion to Hitman 2’s $40 USD Expansion pass, with the Gold edition running $100 USD. Additional DLC will be available once Haven Island releases, including new challenges, location mastery unlocks, and more. IOI will hold a livestream on Monday, September 23, to detail everything on offer in Haven Island ahead of its global launch.

IOI Monthly Livestream Start Time

  • 2 PM PT
  • 4 PM CST
  • 5 PM ET
  • 10 PM BST

IO Interactive suggested Hitman 3’s possibility back in July. In a NoClip documentary, IOI CEO Hakan Abrak did say, while not exclitly confirming anything, the studio is “looking into the future with new things and potentially new IPs that we might be working on.”

FIFA 20 Review In Progress – Forza FIFA

Ahhh, FIFA. Like the setting of the sun, the drawing in of the nights, the putting on of an old winter coat, there’s both an inevitability and a level of comfort that comes with the release of a new FIFA game. The football season is properly back. The squads are correct again. A couple of new features to keep us occupied through the long, dark nights. All is right with the world.

FIFA 20 might not be the series at absolute peak form–so far, Volta doesn’t seem like the revolution it perhaps could have been and Career Mode still feels underdeveloped–but modern FIFA is such a broad, deep, and complete offering that it remains a must-buy for football fans.

On the pitch, FIFA 20 is remarkably similar to last year. Sports games do change year-on-year–I just feel that rate of change is slowing as we reach the end of this console generation. So while there are some welcome improvements–more natural first touches and more satisfying ball physics–things feel very similar to FIFA 19 once you walk out of the tunnel.

Set pieces, have, however, received a bit of a makeover–specifically direct free kicks and penalties. In a throwback to the halcyon days of FIFA 2003, both now have you aim a reticle at the precise location you want to place the ball. Then, incorporating last year’s genius timed finishing mechanic, you’ll need to press shoot again at the right time, while also adding curve in the case of free kicks. Both take a little time to get used to, but they offer greater depth and satisfaction when you smack one into the top corner.

In another nostalgic move–and in an attempt to offer greater improvements off the pitch–FIFA 20 introduces a new mode, the FIFA Street-like Volta Football, bringing street soccer to the main series for the first time. You control a squad of street superstars aiming to become the world’s best in a journey that takes you across various unique, exotic locales. These three-, four-, or five-a-side matches are shorter and more chaotic than a standard 11-a-side game, and they feel sufficiently different and entertaining to become a worthwhile staple in FIFA’s roster of modes. Fancier tricks and flicks and simplified tactics make it a mode that feels a little more focused on, well, fun, than the more traditional game types–but don’t expect the depth FIFA Street gave us all those years ago. There are no Gamebreaker shots here, and it’s not as easy to utterly humiliate your opponent with outrageous nutmegs and rainbow flicks. Volta League, the mode’s online portion, hasn’t been populated enough to find a match so far, so we’ll bring you more on that in the days ahead–but the ability to play against human opponents, recruit opposition players, and kit your created character out in new gear means this will almost certainly present more longevity than the mode it replaces, The Journey.

Volta’s campaign mode, meanwhile, is a single-player, uh, journey in which you’ll face off against AI teams. The world tour structure is compelling and those locations are well-realized, with unique personalities and play styles of their own. However the characters you share your travels with are so irritating, and the writing so aggressively How Do You Do, Fellow Kids, that it becomes a bit of a chore to play. Hopefully, more time with the mode will lead to these characters endearing themselves a little more. In a final, strange note, Volta requires an internet connection, even when playing the single-player mode, for reasons that remain unclear.

Career Mode is FIFA’s other main single-player offering, and it comes with a raft of new features. Proper conversations between manager and players are finally possible, for example; players will come to you to complain to or thank you about their game-time, as they have for many years, but you now have the opportunity to reply, with the aim to keep their morale–and hence performance levels–high. The system is shallow, with the morale bar seemingly the only variable you can affect, and messages still repeat far too often, but it at least feels a little more interactive than the stagnant old email system.

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Similarly, pre- and post-match press conferences have been overhauled, and they now appear more like those seen in The Journey in previous seasons. Again, the objective here is to maintain your team’s morale, and again there isn’t much more to it, but it is more visually and intellectually stimulating than a simple menu screen, as it was before. The final big new feature is dynamic player potential, which I haven’t gotten deep enough into a save to test just yet, but I’ll report back on its effects soon.

Disappointingly, despite all the changes, Career Mode still feels a little barebones so far, and it still contains a number of inaccuracies. The transfer window ends erroneously late for English clubs, for instance, while VAR and short goal kicks are yet to be introduced into FIFA at all. Transfer negotiations are unchanged, save for two new background locations in which to hammer out a deal, and scouting and youth teams are the same for yet another year in a row. Career Mode has taken some steps forward this year, but a revolution is needed.

Ultimate Team, meanwhile, continues its expansion and is now bigger and better than ever. The adoption of a Fortnite-esque battle pass model in FUT Seasons–not to be confused with FUT Seasons, the sub-mode–is somewhat confusing, but a masterstroke. It essentially manifests itself as an expansion of the existing daily and weekly challenges, with new tasks you can work towards over multiple weeks. Rewards include packs, players, new cosmetic options including tifos and balls, and more. It all adds another way to be rewarded and another objective to work toward–especially useful for those who struggle to compete in the weekend league (which, by the way, is unchanged and hence remains as moreish, and as grindy, as ever).

FUT’s other new addition is Friendlies, which are a new way of playing casually within Ultimate Team. There are no great rewards for playing FUT Friendlies, but you do still earn coins, and, crucially, player injuries, contracts, fitness, and your playing record remain unaffected. The community has been crying out for a place to go when they can’t face the pressure of Rivals or Squad Battles, and finally they have it. It also contains the same in-depth stat tracking and bizarre mode variants as was introduced in FIFA 19’s Kick Off mode, along with new House Rules options. They’re a weird, entertaining place to go to have fun with friends and they mean that, if it wasn’t already, Ultimate Team really feels like its own game now. You might understandably disagree with its pay-to-win tendencies–yes, spending more money on packs means you’re still more likely to get Lionel Messi than someone simply grinding for in-game currency–but FUT is as compelling and complete as game modes come, and I am horribly obsessed once again.

Completeness appears to be the ethos FIFA lives by, and despite the omission of Juventus (forza Piemonte Calcio), this year’s game feels more complete than ever. The same goes for its aesthetics and licensing, which continue to offer the closest virtual approximation of real-world football–or, more accurately, Sky Sports’ version of football–available.

Flawed and iterative, but comforting, complete, and compelling, FIFA 20 is as frustrating and as essential as ever. The Journey and FIFA Street will continue to be missed, but Volta offers a genuinely different option for those who want to dip in and out across FIFA’s smorgasboard of game types, while Ultimate Team continues its route to world domination. It’s just a shame Career Mode continues to stagnate–even if EA has finally remembered it exists.

Editor’s note: With servers online but currently unpopulated before release, we’ll bring our final verdict on FIFA 20 soon, once we’ve had more chance to test out Pro Clubs, Volta League, and Ultimate Team.

Untitled Goose Game Review

Untitled Goose Game–a game in which you play as a jerk goose who waddles through a small English town ruining everyone’s day– feels like a miniature version of Hitman, but with mischief instead of murder. Like those games, it’s all about learning an environment inside-out and figuring out how to play various people and systems against each other to achieve your goals. You wander between four small, quaint locations and tick off objectives from your list by wreaking havoc on the people you encounter and generally being a nuisance. At first, you’re annoying a man as he tends to his garden, turning on his sprinklers as he stands over them, stealing the keys to his gate, nicking his produce, and generally getting in his way. The game continues like this, as the goose’s to-do list demands that it causes upset to most of the people it encounters. Working through the game means figuring out how each element interacts with everything else and how to corralling various people, who all react to the goose differently.

It’s a comedy first and foremost. Figuring out how to complete each objective might be essential to your progress, but the real fun is in seeing how harried you can make everyone. When you need to make a man spit out his tea, steal his shoes, and ruin his garden, you might start to feel sorry for him, but you also won’t want to stop terrorizing him. The goose can only run, grab onto things, honk, and flap its wings, but through some combination of these actions you can manipulate the folks you encounter and cause chaos. One character might run in fear if you honk at them; another might bend over if you drop something for them, giving you a chance to steal their hat; another might leave their post if you steal something of theirs and drop it far away, giving you the chance to go back while they’re distracted and steal the object you were really after all along.

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The humor of Untitled Goose Game is built into the mechanics and animations; seeing the goose waddle along, honking and flapping its wings, is inherently amusing and satisfying even before you start causing mischief because of how perfectly evocative it is of a real bird. The clean, colorful visual style is also a treat. But the reactive soundtrack is what really sells the goose’s charms. The music, based on Claude Debussy’s Préludes, springs into action dynamically based on the goose’s actions, punctuating moments when it shocks someone and adding a buoyancy to any scene involving a chase. It gives the game a feeling of farce; at its best, it’s reminiscent of a Buster Keaton film, especially since there’s no dialogue.

The objectives you’re asked to complete often require some lateral thinking. Getting into the headspace of the goose and figuring out how a few actions can spiral into something that’s going to annoy one of your targets is very entertaining. Sometimes it’s immediately clear what you need to do, and sometimes the solution is more abstract, but most objectives will name an object that you can find within the environment. In the second location, for instance, you’re told to “get on TV”–the solution isn’t immediately obvious, but finding the TV you need to interact with is not difficult. Untitled Goose Game lightly leads you towards its puzzle solutions without explicitly holding your hand through them, so figuring out a clever solution is rewarding.

You need to complete all but one objective in each location to advance, which is a nice concession, as it means you can progress to the next area even if one of the puzzles just isn’t clicking for you. Sometimes it’s just a matter of figuring out what needs to be done and then doing it, but you also need to practice some level of finesse: The goose can’t get too close to anyone who’s going to try to shoo it away, and you’ll often need to be stealthy, sneaking under tables, causing distractions, and hiding behind bushes and in boxes like a long-necked, web-toed Solid Snake.

Each area also features a fetch quest objective, for which you need to gather several items and put them in one place while making sure that you’re not caught. These objectives are the least fun, generally, because too much is left to the imagination; the first one asks you to “have a picnic” by dragging a variety of particular items to a picnic blanket, but once you’ve done so the objective is immediately complete, with no additional vignettes or animations to reward all that effort. Untitled Goose Game’s best objectives reward you not only with a feeling of satisfaction, but with a fun, charming bit of interaction between the goose and the people it encounters, whether that means watching a man stumble around with a bucket on his head or watching someone else wearily resign themselves to their favorite hat being gone.

Untitled Goose Game is also extremely short. When I reached the end, I was surprised at how little time it had taken–I had only been playing for about two hours. Thankfully, after the credits roll you unlock a new list of objectives across the now fully unlocked map, but there isn’t the same incentive to complete them when you know that you won’t be rewarded with a new location to explore, or even, necessarily, new interactions. Most of them are twists on previous objectives or more complicated versions of things you’ve already done, often involving moving items between different locations.

I’m glad that those extra objectives are there, though, and I had a good time working through them. It’s just a shame that there isn’t a bit more, because Untitled Goose Game ends far before I felt like I’d had my fill or seen everything the game was going to throw at me. Being short isn’t inherently bad, but Untitled Goose Game’s playground could stand to be bigger. I wished that I could keep riding the high of unlocking new areas and messing with new people, and it still felt like there was plenty of room to escalate things.

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For all the jerkiness I performed, my favorite moment in Untitled Goose Game was the one scene where the game leaned into the goose’s charms. I wandered up behind two people having a chat at the pub and hit the button dedicated to honking. The two women turned to look at me, startled, but far less hostile than most of the characters I’d encountered. When I stood in a specific spot they mimed commands for me to perform, fulfilling one of my objectives while absolutely delighting the two women. Untitled Goose Game is a hilariously antagonistic experience most of the time, but I identified strongly with these characters and how lovable they found this horrible goose.

The important thing is that Untitled Goose Game is a hoot. It’s a comedy game that focuses on making the act of playing it funny, rather than simply being a game that features jokes. Wishing that it was longer speaks to how much fun I had with it. There’s nothing else quite like Untitled Goose Game; it’s charming and cute despite being mean, and both very silly and very clever. It’s also probably the best non-racing game ever to feature a dedicated “honk” button.