Every Last Point-&-Click Adventure Game Ever Made, in Excrutiatingly Chronological Order

A definitive and growing list of all third-person, fixed-perspective, puzzle-based adventure games. They're listed in release-date order as much as humanly possible, though the exact release dates of many '80s and '90s games have been lost to history, and Backloggd's dates are in many cases wrong. I even include some titles I don't quite consider proper adventure games but which are popularly thought of as such, like the Quest for Glory games which have combat elements, or the Wadjet Eye games most of which are dialogue/cut-scene fests with little actual puzzle-solving. The soul of the point-&-click is the painterly composition, so I don't include games where the camera follows you around 3D-wise like an action platformer (ever so sorry, Telltale). If you know of a game you think qualifies, chime in in the comments. Following is a brief list of the more notable adventure games I know of that don't currently have entries on Backloggd.

Earthrise: A Guild Investigation (1990) by Interstel
Armaeth (1991) (Short)
Gobliins 2 (1992)
Avvy: Denarius Avaricius Sextus (July 1992) by Thorsoft
An American Tale: The Computer Adventures of Fievel and His Friends (1993) (Short)
Lone Eagle: Colombian Encounter (1994) by W.D. Bledsoe DVM
Tom Long: The Time Adventure (1994) by Promotion Software
Donkey Island (May 1994) by Pterodon Software
7 Days and 7 Nights (1994) by Pterodon Software
Lord Avalot d'Argent (1994) by Thorsoft
Time Paradox (1996) by Flair Software
Léto s Oskarem (Summer with Oskar) (1998)
Horké léto (Hot Summer) (1998) by Maxon
Hariboy's Quest (1998)
Horké léto 2: Majer se vrací (1999) by Centauri Productions
Rocky Horror Interactive Show (1999)
Cirque de Zale (2004) by Rebecca Clements
Stargate Adventure (Oct. 2005) by Sektor 13
Meteorhead (Feb. 2008)
The Vacuum (Aug. 2008) by David Proctor (Freeware)
The Tales of Bingwood: Chapter 1 - To Save a Princess (Nov. 2008) (Short)
The Legend of Crystal Valley (March 2009)
Patchwork (Jan. 2013) by Ilyich (Short)
The Bum (April 2013) by Gribbler and Parafia (Freeware)
Broken Windows (2020) by G.O.C. Games
Lucas Mendoza: Amateur Detective (Sep. 2021)
Space Quest: A Son of Xenon (Sep. 2022) by Two Guys Far from Sirius

Endless additional hordes of itty-bitty, ultra-independent games can be found at places like adventuregamestudio.co.uk and YouTube channels like Future Vintage Gaming and AGS Showcase. Knock yourself out.

Short. Amateur. Crude visuals.
Hands-down the most beautiful poster image of all time.
Features very cute little 3D-rendered isometric perspectives.
Short children's game.
I normally object to adventure games that are nearly all talk, but man this series pulls you in.
Short. Amanita Design tiptoes into the fray.
Humongous Entertainment exits the stage.
Short. Basically a Day of the Tentacle tribute game. Nice-lookin'.
'Nother rather brilliant adventure game mystery by Ben 'Yahtzee' Croshaw.
Short
Pretty short. Wadjet Eye enters the fray, a developer light on puzzles and inventory and very heavy on dialogue.
Heavily dialogue-based.
Heavily dialogue-based.
Incredibly tiny game, but it has got THE funniest writing in adventure game history.
The 5th-greatest adventure game ever made, sez I. If possible, avoid the tolerable but inferior 'Definitive Version', which sucks out a good deal of the original game's charm.
One of the top ten adventure games ever made, sez I. Just incomprehensible that this one's so little-known.

5 Comments


9 months ago

Legitimate question: what is a point and click adventure game from the late 90s/early 2000s that doesn't look super bleak and depressing

8 months ago

Due to my ignorance about how to reply on this site, I answered @Tendog's question over on one of his lists. Anyone interested can see our conversation here: https://www.backloggd.com/u/tendog/list/flash-point-and-click-escape-games/

8 months ago

Maniac Mansion
LucasArts' first adventure game, the first in the world to use an actual point-&-click interface, and the first in the world not to kill you if you screw up.

Absolutely not, this game is quite happy to kill you off and screw you over via a multitude of ways. Its actually 'The Secret of Monkey Island' which fits the non-kill bit.

8 months ago

@Jamesbuc Boy is my face red. I admit I haven't actually played that one. Now I'm confused; I remember Gilbert talking about how cruel he thought Sierra games were for killing players all the time, and how he wanted to find a different way to design games like this. Are there just considerably fewer possible death traps? And none of the LucasArts games between that and Monkey 1 avoid deaths? (Monkey 1 does technically have that one drowning death.) I've played most of Loom and I didn't think that had any.

8 months ago

Loom I couldnt remember if it did or not but...

- Maniac Mansion - You can outright blow up the house in several ways, die by radioactive microwave water, die from several characters killing you for one reason or another like the hamster incident and theres at least two ways to completely ruin the game if you pick the wrong kids as theres at least one combination that locks off almost every single way to beat the game.

- Zak McKracken - There's a heap of ways to permanently miss items, lose items and generally make the game unwinnable. Most are fair and basically come as a result of doing things stupidly or in the wrong order but theres the odd weird one. Also some deaths here and there not including the copy protection failure.

- Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade - Several ways to die here, mostly involving letting Nazi's beat Indy up or by falling for certain traps. Also you can punch Hitler and get an instant game over.

Technically there is 'one' way to die in Monkey Island... though its more of a easter egg since it involves standing around underwater for just under ten minutes. Which is a silly thing to do.


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