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Below you will find a walkthrough for Chapter 7 of Judgment called Limelight. Go back to the Yagami Detective Agency and go to sleep. Then meet Hoshino and talk about the current situation. Outside you will meet a large group of Matsugane Family, whom you must defeat. This page contains Linelight Video Walkthroughs for Android called 'Walkthrough Green Diamonds World 3' and has been posted or updated.
A memo about the third green puzzle in B world: the game was updated, so this solution won't work anymore (there is a stopper now between the puzzles). The real solution is: during the first 'tick' go all the way up and continue to go up even after stopping, on flashes go fast to the nearest green trigger, stop there for another 'tick', go to the second green trigger. Your first clone will open the barrier together with you and second (or third) one stops everything because of the stopper outside the now nonexistent barrier.
I should probably be burned out on abstract puzzle games that use minimal (but still somehow striking) visuals by now, but I actually can’t get enough of them. There’s just something about less conventional brain teasing coupled with a unique look that always piques my interest.
It’s a weirdly specific preference that Linelight fits quite nicely.Linelight looks pretty in its simplicity right from the start thanks to the use of intricate lines and faux light effects. It’s like watching the sentient glow from a neon sign move around on its own. The way your movement reveals more of the environment as you progress is another very neat touch. The approach to visuals was enough to draw me in, but what ended up cementing my regard for the game’s look is what happens when you hit the pause button.
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As the menu appears the camera pulls back to reveal the world you’ve been revealing in its entirety, which looks like a series of line scribbles made with light that get more and more intricate the farther you go.Each section is its own puzzle, with things naturally getting trickier as you progress. What begins as a very simple matter of following a single track steadily opens up to add elements like multiple tracks, hazards, button-activated pathways and more. This sort of stuff is kind of a prerequisite for a good puzzle game, but I especially appreciate how Linelight always introduces new stuff in a “safe” manner. What I mean is, if you’re seeing a new type of puzzle element or hazard for the first time, it’s going to be on a screen that’s set up solely to show you how it works — you won’t have to actually figure out a solution until you move on to the next screen.
This is a great way to wordlessly give players the information they need in order to work their way through puzzles, and I wish more games took this kind of approach.Hats off to the designers for the puzzles themselves, too. It always seems like just as I’m about to get tired of seeing one particular element, a new one is introduced.
That, or existing mechanics that I’ve already become accustomed to are utilized in new and interesting ways. It’s yet another thing I wish more games, especially puzzle games, would do.The one problem I’ve run into is the virtual stick used to control your little light-thingy. It works just fine for the most part, but precision movement — especially when time is a factor — isn’t so great. There are times when you need to make quick turns down alternate pathways with a very small margin for error, and accidentally overshooting the turn because the stick didn’t register properly can get to be annoying.
I’ve been able to work around it by way of stubborn persistence, but I wish blaming myself for getting a solution wrong was the only frustrating thing about this. Good thing there’s no real penalty for “dying” other than having to restart that particular screen.Linelight is the sort of game I never get tired of stumbling upon. It’s an unexpected gem — slightly imperfect, but far too interesting and charming in its ambition for me to care.
Not that it’s hurting for accolades, but if you haven’t tried Linelight, yet you definitely should.
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