Metascore
84

Generally favorable reviews - based on 8 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 7 out of 8
  2. Negative: 0 out of 8
  1. Oct 13, 2015
    91
    One of the best story-driven games on PC, 80 Days is beautifully written, effortlessly charming, and thrillingly unpredictable.
  2. Jan 20, 2016
    90
    The game’s direction is also peerless, and the aesthetic choices are just right: bold enough to be obvious on a small screen for tablets, but creative and consistent, furthering the atmosphere. The game is unique and I wish there was more like it, and I expect that, despite the 80 day limit, I will play it over and over, each time discovering a new way around the world.
  3. Jan 19, 2016
    90
    80 Days is a modern take on the choose-your-own adventure novel, with a branching story that spans the entire globe. It's a game that practically demands you play it more than once.
  4. Sep 29, 2015
    90
    If you missed this treasure last time, now is the perfect time to don your travelling gear and let this game's prose take you on a global adventure.
  5. Oct 5, 2015
    85
    A beautifully written, masterfully designed choose-your-own-adventure/Grand Journey yarn, that Verne himself would have been most proud of.
  6. CD-Action
    Dec 16, 2015
    80
    Storytelling in 80 Days is so rich and polished that this adventure becomes your own. [12/2015, p.65]
  7. Sep 30, 2015
    80
    Unlike life-simulator and open-world games, it doesn't presuppose and anticipate your addiction. It simply uplifts.
  8. Nov 4, 2015
    60
    80 Days works much better on mobiles – what works on mobile phones may not work on PC. However, the core of the game, consisting in reading interesting text and making decision in hundreds of situations, works tolerably even on PC.
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  1. 80 Days is the most human game I’ve ever played. It is also, simply put, one of the best games I’ve ever played.

Awards & Rankings

User Score
7.3

Mixed or average reviews- based on 44 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 22 out of 44
  2. Negative: 4 out of 44
  1. Oct 26, 2021
    9
    História - 10/10 - A história do jogo você já deve conhecer, mas aqui é bem aprofundada e com um plus, você vai aprendendo mais sobre cadaHistória - 10/10 - A história do jogo você já deve conhecer, mas aqui é bem aprofundada e com um plus, você vai aprendendo mais sobre cada região que você escolher visitar.
    Gráficos - 10/10 - Para o que se propões não há o que reclamar.
    Trilha Sonora - 6/10 - É decente, mas facilmente esquecível. Poderia ter explorado mais sons típicos de cada região visitada.
    Jogabilidade - 10/10 - Fácil de jogar, puzzles e lógica simples de entender.

    Conclusão: Para jogar e re-jogar! Sabe aqueles jogos de puzzle, com uma boa dosagem de aleatoriedade, uma pitada de lógica de mercado (compre barato e venda caro) e vários caminhos diferentes para seguir? Esse é 80 days! Daqueles jogos que vez ou outra você vai reinstalar para dar outra volta ao mundo!
    Full Review »
  2. Oct 2, 2021
    6
    80 Days is a string of pearls. But it requires a bit of patience to get from one pearl to the next.

    At its core, 80 days is a collection of
    80 Days is a string of pearls. But it requires a bit of patience to get from one pearl to the next.

    At its core, 80 days is a collection of vignettes and novellas, wrapped into the bare bones of the plot of the well-known Jules Verne novel, with the steampunk elements and colonialism criticism dialed up to eleven.

    It’s main gameplay loop is quite simple: depart from a city, read the novella occurring during travel, arrive at the next city, read the short story occurring in that city, procure funds via the market or the bank, plan your next trip, take it. And over it all the famous challenge: make it across the world in 90 days. There is a little challenge in planning the trip, because you' always have to keep the time limit in mind and procuring funds is an issue that actually has to be addressed now and then, but you have to want it pretty bad to actually fail the game. It's hardly engaging on its own.

    There is a lot of towns you can visit during your travels: Every city I ever heard of and quite a few I never heard of are here, all of them with their unique splash screens and stories, but while the art style is striking and different, the vistas aren't exactly breathtaking, and while every scene is filled with lots of little details, over time the different cities start to blend into each other. Same with the splash screens symbolizing the different means of travel. The soundscape is sparse, but appropriate. The music does it's very best to evoke the atmosphere of the Jules Verne books and mostly succeeds, but the production values don't supply a stand-alone reason to play this game either.

    The main reason to engage with the game is the writing then. And there is quality writing here: Some of it is delightfully playful, surprising, touching, some of it even delivers biting social commentary. But everything is bite-sized: As soon as a scenario presents itself, it is resolved, and we move on. As soon as we get to know and like a character, we leave him or her back in the dust of the road. The through-line of the challenge to circumvent the globe in 80 days is barely addressed, let alone developed. The only characters that stay with us are Sir Fogg and Passepartout, and only the latter gets any kind of development. I must stress this: Even Phineas Fogg, the deuteragonist of the story, remains a shadowy ill-defined figure during the story. That's a problem.

    All in all, this game is a book with music and a soundtrack and some pretty, if same-ish pictures, and it is designed to have it's chapters read out of order so there are almost no proper arcs. A few storylets have multiple chapters, but even those only add up to a quite short short story. The quality of these tiny pieces of prose is good enough to keep me engaged for two playthroughs, but in the end, I would recommend this only to hardcore Jules Verne fans who won't play anything that doesn't have a link to Victorian Adventure. There is writing just as good in better games out there.

    TLDR: If you have 5 minutes now and then and you want to read about a short adventure of Phineas Fogg and Passepartout, get this game. Everybody else, look elsewhere.
    Full Review »
  3. Oct 8, 2020
    7
    Cozy game with well-written storytelling but can get a bit repetitive. Not the story but some of the options for traveling and exploring canCozy game with well-written storytelling but can get a bit repetitive. Not the story but some of the options for traveling and exploring can feel lacking.
    Closer to an 8 than a 6.
    Full Review »