The infamously bewildering ending to 1991’s Monkey Island 2: LeChuck’s Revenge left players longing for resolution that subsequent Monkey Island games never delivered. Three decades later, and after effectively saying it would likely never happen, key members of the original Monkey Island team – including series creator Ron Gilbert – have finally made the game that picks up after the closing moments of LeChuck’s Revenge.
Return to Monkey Island’s mischievous opening confidently asserts that this is the authentic Monkey Island experience we’ve come for: sharp, self-aware, and brilliantly silly. It’ll bombard you with gags, but the characters you meet are more than comedic props, and the cunning stream of interwoven puzzles has been modernised to keep the pace up without losing the satisfaction of problem solving. It’s a massive success.
The story is consistently engrossing and energetic
AGE BEFORE BOOTY
The opening prologue whips you through an homage to classic moments before thrusting the shambling Threepwood back into his past. Older, tireder, and more challenged by holding his breath, Guybrush has’s classic characters and locales. Everything and everyone here has gone on a journey. Wally the cartographer has been reshaped by finding his confidence without losing his charming spirit. Even LeChuck seems to have found a softer side despite remaining the furiously irritated villain we adore.