US Standard | ||
Global Standard | €8.24 | |
Europe Xbox Live key -3%: CDKEYZ |
Deep in the Nordic wilderness, a teenage boy named Otto is forced to flee his home after a band of brutal hunters rip through his village in search of a mythical creature rumoured to inhabit the forest. Now on the run for his life, Otto inadvertently finds and befriends the elusive creature being sought by the hunters. Thus begins the perilous adventure of Troll and Otto, two outcasts struggling to survive.
Together, Otto and Troll embark on a journey through treacherous territory plagued with rivals. Natives to the forest, the unlikely friends must use their inherent skills to sneak, strategise, and battle their way back home. The forest is filled with unknowns, and teamwork is pivotal to staying alive.
Two characters are the protagonists in this adventure with poor narrative content, and it fails to empathize with the characters and their history leaving us a bittersweet taste with good ideas but with its graphics from the past generation presenting numerous technical problems added to the final quality of the product. That high price is an inconvenient thing.
Maximum Games have a solid premise throughout Troll and I, and the game can be made much better with patches, but ultimately Troll and I will be lost to the vast majority of players who are unwilling to see the game for its good points opposed to its potential.
Troll and I has a pretty big price tag so I wouldn’t be rushing out to purchase it any time soon as the quality of the gameplay doesn’t justify it.
Troll and I is a mess of an experience all the way through. With bare-bones gameplay, Xbox 360-era graphics and an atrocious frame rate, Troll and I is not worthy of anyone’s time at its $50 price tag.
Troll and I was a miserable experience in just about every way imaginable. There are technical problems abound and the sum parts of its design baffle. Don’t play it out of curiosity, you won’t enjoy it.
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