Magic Encyclopedia: Moon Light
Bullet
- Exciting minigames
- Find the professor!
- Play Magic Encyclopedia
- Check out our Blog Walkthrough
Min System request
- OS : Windows XP/Vista/7/8
- CPU : 1.0 GHz
- Memory : 512
- DiretX : 9.0
- Hard driver (MB) : 208
Review for game: Magic Encyclopedia: Moon Light
After Professor Fobros goes missing from the Magic School, it`s up to Katrina, and her brother Roger, to find him. Discover Professor Fobros` terrifying secret, as you travel around the world in this exciting Adventure game. Unravel an ancient mystery as you piece together a powerful amulet in Magic Encyclopedia 2: Moonlight. Can you solve the tricky puzzles and master the minigames in order to find the professor?
Review at a glimpse
Genre : Puzzle
Find your A-HA! moment with mind-bending puzzles and jigsaw games.
Game Rank
6608 points
(views: 190)
5
out of 5
based on 65 user ratings
Please rate the game
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REQUIRES Windows/MacOS
Ages: 3 YEARS & UPGame Description:
Help Katrina and her brother Roger find the missing Professor Fobros! Go on an exciting adventure around the world!
AFERON - BigFishGames
I have played the first three in the series and this one is by far my favorite of the three. It has all the elements needed for a great HO/Adventure game and has a nice balance between challenge and fun. Some of the tasks were slightly difficult to figure out, but nothing was impossible or frustrating. A fun game with a storyline that's a nice break from the "dark/mystery/sinister" type games that are so prevalent in the genre!
I thought this game had potential, the storyline is nothing new but not bad in all, it was just the game itself. The music was annoying to begin with and i just can't tolerate fragment hos, they're just so tedious and boring! sorry i won't be buying this game. Over ?5 for this??? no thanks!
Finished game in 4 hours. Mini-games are easy to mildly challenging ? you can play them after completing the main game. FRAGs are colorful and detailed. Most missing fragments are large, but there are a few which are very small. Some objects from one scene may be used in another, but there are never more than 4 scenes open at one time. Very soothing music. Dialogue is written but flashes by too fast. You may have to repeat the dialogue to read all of it ? especially at the end of the game. Hints are unlimited, unlike the first Magic Encyclopedia (which I thought was more fun).
Not your normal HO game. Fun to play and long enough. Some of the items to find are hard to spot but the hint button works great.
This is the 2nd in the series and is pretty good. The grapics are above average although a little grainy. The storyline is good, the music is ok but can become annoying. This is a fragmented HO that is played in segments of 1 to 4 rooms. Most objects are easy to find, but several can be quite small making it somewhat difficult. The puzzles are all doable and for the most part simple. Hint button refills very quickly and all puzzles can be skipped. You also collect gems in the various locations. The game is not simple or difficult but has a combination of both elements to keep you entertained. It's just a relaxing game with a little difficulty thrown in. Overall I recommend this game.
This is a Fragmented Hidden Object, initially set in China where the graphics are very grainy & are too colourful. However once the game moved into other areas the graphics improved & the artwork was the usual beautiful drawing I associate with the developers who made this game. You are accompanied to each scene by an origami crane that swiftly becomes annoying as you cannot turn off this ?helper? who appears each time you encounter something new; once you get past China this disappears thankfully. The screens load very slowly initially but they are connected to each other by special coins that are collected & by clicking these you can move between scenes with ease. The cursor is beautifully elegant & changes to hand, eye, etc. depending upon what you can do in an area. The hint recharges in 30 seconds & there are no misclick penalties, the mini games are easy at first but soon become harder, there is a skip button. Some item pieces are extremely well blended into the background & difficult to find & some you cannot assemble until you have completed another object. You also collect jewels along the way to charge an amulet. There are 32 levels & I had just completed four of them & was about to start on 5 & 6 (they opened together) when the trial ended. Unfortunately due to the difficulty of seeing many of the objects I will not be purchasing but if you have good eyesight this game should last you quite a while & is well worth playing.
It was challenging enough for a HO game for me. I needed the hints so it was nice to have the hint refill so quickly. The graphics are not as spectacular as other HO games, but not as bad as others.
I enjoyed and loved every moment of this game with the hidden objects you had to find and the wonderfull journeys it took you on. excellent
Magic Encyclopedia Moon Light is a very good game. It's similar to the first Magic Encyclopedia game, but the art work is much better. You have to find hidden fragments of objects, and when you've found them all, then you can use the object. The objective of this game is to find a missing professor. You jump back and forth to different places on a world map, assembling and using objects. Some objects are used in a different room, so you can't use it immediately. In every scene there are jewels to find, and if you don't find them all, you can't finish the game. You can tell if you've found them by looking at the map. A jewel will be above the flag for your location if it still hasn't been found. The one thing I disliked about the game is that some of the fragments were very tiny and hard to find. I clicked all over the screen and found lots of stuff that way - there's no penalty for over-clicking. I liked this game a lot. It's not quite as good as the third and final game, Magic Encyclopedia: Illusions, but it's still lots of fun to play.
Didn't find this game very fun... A bit short and it's one of those games where you search for fragments of pictured items, rather than searching for listed items in a jumbled scene. Apparently the story wasn't all that interesting either as I don't find it memorable. I just took a glance at the walkthrough to try to refresh my memory, but although i remember playing through all the scenes I saw, I don't remember anything about an overall storyline.