

Many of the scenes (especially the grotesque parts) were reminiscent of Ren & Stimpy but otherwise it's difficult to draw comparisons. This game was reminiscent of something like 9: The Last Resort, it being so completely original and unlike anything else. The entire game is presented as shades of radioactive green, and the animations, character designs and creative ideas presented are beyond compare. Each scene is beautifully hand-crafted and every screenshot of the game could be presented as a strange work of art: you can just stop in each … More The puzzles are fun and intuitive but very easy, and there are occasional short arcade-type sections. are less important compared to the atmosphere and the sheer spectacle of the thing. The strengths of this game are in the unique and mind-boggling audio/visual experience you're constantly surprised and amused by the peculiar things happening on the screen and as such gameplay, story, characters, puzzle difficulty, etc. In some ways, Bulb Boy plays more like an interactive experience, a digital sculpture or something. So you set about on your quest to save grandpa and return things back to "normal." In the middle of the night, a dark presence appears from the sky and possesses your grandfather, turning him into a horrible mutated blob monster, and having various supernatural effects on things in the house (including your plush rabbit, a roast chicken, a strawberry plant, a spider and other things).

You live in a little old house with your deformed dog and senile grandfather. You play the character of a little boy whose head is a detachable light bulb. Bulb Boy is a surreal-horror point-n-click adventure/puzzle game and I'm not going to enjoy writing this review since the game itself is very difficult to describe.
