![]() Even though the horse is the franchise’s protagonist, you actually control his owner, a teenage girl named Lucky. Spirit: Lucky’s Big Adventure is aimed at a very young audience, most specifically young girls. It’s no Red Dead Redemption, but these horse riding mechanics aren’t half-bad. A game so simple even a five year old can platinum it in a couple of hours. It is one of the easiest and simplest adventure games I’ve played in recent memory. It’s a super saccharine, pseudo open world adventure published by Outright Games, the same publisher behind almost all other licensed cartoon games out in the market, such as Paw Patrol and Gigantosaurus. The original Spirit movie from 2002 was somewhat dark and serious for a cartoon, but Spirit: Lucky’s Big Adventure is almost like its polar opposite. I really didn’t know what to expect on a game about a horse and his teenage owner. You rarely get a good game out of these deals, but I can’t help but feel morbidly excited to play a tie-in in this day and age, as these kinds of licensed games are my Achilles’ heel. Just like during the golden days of the fifth and sixth console generations. ![]() As in a game (loosely) based on its feature film source material released alongside the movie as part of a multimedia marketing strategy. Ladies and gentlemen, you read that right: in the year of the lord 2021, we’re finally getting a licensed movie tie-in.
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