Switch — Child Of Light Review
But here’s the twist the screenshots don't tell you: It’s also a .
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You spend half your time floating (yes, floating—you have wings) through interconnected side-scrolling levels. It’s simple, almost too simple. You jump, you glide, you solve a "push the block" puzzle. Yet, the Switch’s instant sleep/wake function turns these traversal sections into a perfect commuter’s lullaby. You can clear one screen, put the console to sleep, and wake up still humming the music. The game has a gimmick. Every character speaks in rhymed couplets. Every. Single. Line. "The fire burns, the shadow grows, A lonely girl, a kingdom’s woes." For the first hour, it’s charming. By hour five, you might want to throw Igniculus (your annoying light-fly companion) into the sun. The translation is clunky in spots, forcing rhymes that feel like the writer lost a bet. However, on the Switch, played in short bursts, it works as a sort of fairy tale lullaby. Read it aloud. You’ll look insane on the subway, but it works. The Combat Clock Here is where Child of Light stops being cute and becomes genius. child of light review switch
See that enemy about to heal? Switch to your fastest character, hit them before their bar finishes charging, and they get pushed back in time. The Switch’s shoulder buttons let you swap between your party instantly. It feels like a rhythm game mixed with chess. But here’s the twist the screenshots don't tell
It dares to ask: What if a fantasy epic was just… beautiful? It’s simple, almost too simple
