The Cave opens with a brief monologue, delivered by none other than the living spirit of a magical cave. Yes, a talking cave. It makes dating hell.
The game doesn't take itself too seriously, and neither should you. Booming proclamations and self-aware melodrama are used to good effect in this entertaining adventure/puzzler. There is also more than a little bit of black humour.
Players are asked to choose three of the seven characters hanging around at the title screen to begin the game. I don't know if archetype is the correct word for this motley crew. We have "the time traveler," "the hillbilly," and "the monk," for a start. Although each has their own quest to fulfill—true love, enlightenment, that sort of thing—what they all have in common is a willingness to lie, cheat, steal, and do worse things, in order to get what they want.
The control scheme isn't terribly important. This isn't a game of reflexes, by and large, but of finding the right item and taking the correct action at the appropriate time. The game's available on every system and it should make no particular difference what console you decide to download it on.
The Cave is ultimately in the tradition of the old text adventure games of the '80s, though updated with a graphical interface, much like Windows updated the user experience for PC operating systems. Actually, creator Ron Gilbert previously brought this type of gaming to consoles with the NES-era title, Maniac Mansion, and guess what? It still works.
It is also pretty cool to see Sega, which has been exclusively a software publisher since getting out of the hardware game in 2001, getting some buzz on an IP that didn't originate in the '90s. Sonic the Hedgehog is great and all, but I like seeing something fresh from some of the old guard.
Going back to the characters for a moment, each has a special ability, required for their own quests but which otherwise are mostly irrelevant. Some of them allow you to cheat at the non-character specific quests, shortening aspects of certain puzzles depending on who you have. But for the most part, the game is one of switching between characters, collecting special items, and using them appropriately.







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