New walkthroughs for June 2022

Recommendations by David Welbourn (Kitchener, Ontario)

On Tuesday, June 28, 2022, I published new walkthroughs for the games and stories listed below! Some of these were paid for by my wonderful patrons at Patreon. Please consider supporting me to make even more new walkthroughs for works of interactive fiction at Patreon and Ko-fi.

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1. Dessert Island Adventure
by Nils Fagerburg
(2022)
Average member rating: (8 ratings)

David Welbourn says:

In this fantasy game, you play as Orange Mehringer, an apprentice to Mary Hollywood, the famous pastry wizard. As part of your midterm exam, you must find as many magic ingredients as you can from this dessert island. (And no, that's not a typo.)

2. A Very Hairy Fish-Mess
by Byron Alexander Campbell
(2009)
Average member rating: (2 ratings)

David Welbourn says:

In this absurd horror-comedy, you were making a cheese sammich when Cthulhu summons you to her throne room deep below your home. She tells you that Fishmas, the Time of Giving, is nigh. She orders you to give Cthulhu the largest, stinkiest fish in Cthulhu's Great Realm. Now begone! Fetch it, Human! There shall be much Fishmas Cheer!

3. The Witch's Apprentice
by Garry Francis
(2019)
Average member rating: (3 ratings)

David Welbourn says:

In this game, you play as Susan, a 14 year-old apprentice witch, assigned to Broomhilda, a much older witch. When you first meet in her basement, she orders you to find eight ingredients for her cauldron. She's brewing a spell that will keep children safe from restless spirits this Halloween.

4. Magic, by Geoff Fortytwo (2008)
Average member rating: (5 ratings)
David Welbourn says:

In this odd game, you play as a magician-for-hire the day after a bad gig and a night in the rain. You find your top hat and flip its catch to release Rupert, your rabbit, who immediately attacks you like a demon and starts a reign of terror. You also find a Meta trick that lets you COMPARE things to other things to transform them.

5. The Blue Lettuce
by Caleb Wilson
(2021)
Average member rating: (9 ratings)

David Welbourn says:

In this short fantasy, you play as a groundhog in a wizard's garden. There's lots of tasty magical plants you want to eat today, but the blue lettuce is the tastiest!

6. Dash Slapney and the Calamitous Candy Corn Cornucopia
by Andrew Schultz
(2011)
Average member rating: (6 ratings)

David Welbourn says:

In this silly small buggy game, you play as Dash Slapney. You foil the bad guys with a bare minimum effort and dumb luck. Your new mission: save Halloween here in Vanillaville. It's being taken over by candy corn.

7. Heated, by Timothy Peers (2010)
Average member rating: (19 ratings)
David Welbourn says:

In this frustrating slice of life, you wake up to the blaring of your alarm clock. But don't get heated! Your future is at stake! Can you get to work on time, looking good, smelling good, and with a cool head? If you fail, you could lose your job. But success could mean a raise or even a promotion!

8. Queen of Swords, by Jessica Knoch (2003)
Average member rating: (3 ratings)
David Welbourn says:

In this one-room art piece, you play as a woman in a reserved room at the local library where you and your husband, David, will practise using electric fencing equipment. There's quite a lot of it, and you're not sure what order to put everything on or what connects to what. David, of course, will try to help.

9. Threediopolis
by Andrew Schultz
(2013)
Average member rating: (28 ratings)

David Welbourn says:

In this wordplay game, you play as a citizen of the multi-level city of Threediopolis in the year 2100. Today, you got lost and found Ed Dunn in a penthouse. He immediately hires you to visit several people and places, but his list is rather cryptic. Still, it includes all the addresses, so how hard can it be?

10. Wedding Day, by Emery Joyce (2014)
Average member rating: (9 ratings)
David Welbourn says:

In this short story, it's your wedding day. You are not young for a bride. Once dressed, you try to enjoy the celebration in the village square. But as the crowd dances and the Village Elder stands apart, watching, you wonder if you can truly go through with it. Are you ready?


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