Thimbleweed Park

Thimbleweed Park

⭐️4.8 / 5
Rating
🙌797
Ratings
📼1 vid & 5 scs
Content
📦w/o updates
Updates frequency
🗣❌ unsupported
Your locale
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All Versions of Thimbleweed Park

1.0.2

September 28, 2017

This app has been updated by Apple to display the Apple Watch app icon. * Arrows add to tutorial screens. * Fix for audio dropping when receiving a phone call. * Small bug fixes.
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1.0.1

September 19, 2017

* Small bug fixes

1.0.0

September 18, 2017

Price History of Thimbleweed Park

Description of Thimbleweed Park

A brand new adventure game from Ron Gilbert and Gary Winnick, creators of the classics Monkey Island and Maniac Mansion! Play as five characters to uncover the surreal mystery of Thimbleweed Park -- a town where a dead body is the least of your problems. A haunted hotel, an abandoned circus, a burnt-out pillow factory, a dead body pixelating under the bridge, toilets that run on vacuum tubes... you’ve never visited a place like Thimbleweed Park before. Five people with nothing in common have been drawn to this rundown, forgotten town. They don’t know it yet, but they are all deeply connected. And they’re being watched. ...Who is Agent Ray really working for and will she get what they want? ...What does Junior Agent Reyes know about a 20 year old factory fire that he’s not saying? ...Will the ghost, Franklin, get to speak to his daughter again? ...Will Ransome the *Beeping* Clown ever become a decent human being? ...Will aspiring game developer Delores abandon her dreams and stick by her family? ...And most importantly: how come no one cares about that dead body? By the end of a long, strange night in Thimbleweed Park, all of this will be answered -- and you’ll question everything you thought you knew. In a town like Thimbleweed Park, a dead body is the least of your problems. Key Features: - From Ron Gilbert and Gary Winnick, creators of Monkey Island and Maniac Mansion. - A neo-noir mystery set in 1987. - 5 playable characters who can work together… or get on each other’s nerves. - Not a walking simulator! - Satisfying puzzles intertwined with a twisty-turny story that will stay with you. - 1980s-style telephone hint line gives in-game puzzle help -- if you want it - A vast, bizarre world to explore at your own pace. - A joke every 2 minutes... guaranteed!* - Casual and Hard modes with varied difficulty. - English voices with English, German, French, Italian, Russian, and Spanish subtitles. *Not a guarantee.
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Thimbleweed Park: FAQ

Can Thimbleweed Park be used on iPad devices?

Yes, Thimbleweed Park offers an iPad version.
Terrible Toybox, Inc. is the developer of Thimbleweed Park.
The app needs iOS 9.0 or later to function properly.
Thimbleweed Park has an impressive rating of 4.8 out of 5, indicating that it is a top-quality app.
The App Genre Of The Thimbleweed Park App Is Games.
The latest version of the Thimbleweed Park app is 1.0.2.
The latest Thimbleweed Park app update was released on June 30, 2024.
Thimbleweed Park was first made available on February 6, 2023.
The Thimbleweed Park app is rated Terrible Toybox, Inc. and may contain content unsuitable for children under the age of 12.
Thimbleweed Park is now available to use in English, French, German and 3 more.
Unfortunately, Thimbleweed Park is not on Apple Arcade.
Unfortunately, Thimbleweed Park does not provide opportunities for in-app purchases.
Unfortunately, Thimbleweed Park is not fully compatible with Apple Vision Pro.

Video & Screenshots of Thimbleweed Park

iphone
ipad

Alternatives to Thimbleweed Park

Reviews of Thimbleweed Park

  • Great Concept, With a Few Missed Oppurtunities

    All of the elements that could have made Thimbleweed Park an excellent game were there. I loved the idea of a seemingly normal game that begins to devolve as the characters realize [spoiler], but poor pacing and mismatched plot elements caused it to fall slightly short of what it could have been. The transition from the murder plot to the reality-bending one could have been done better with a group shock moment, but instead the story slowly slides away from that plot line. Despite the use of chapters, there still were very few defining moments that broke up the first 2/3 into plot elements, as that part was more of a series of puzzles. The execution of the ending could have been better, because the maniacal computers felt cheesy. Seeing the characters find the secret on their own would have been more interesting, especially because by the time of the big reveal, the player probably has read the journals and figured it out. Robots and ghosts coexisting felt off to me as well. Finally, each character having their own ending made the finale feel anticlimactic. Despite these criticisms, this was still an enjoyable game with an engaging storyline. I would definitely recommend it to serious point-and-click fans, especially if they grew up during the 80s.
  • Refund requested on a beloved game

    Foolish me, to think a game with full controller support for every single platform would do the same on the top mobile platform.. I mean if Nintendo can do it..?? make some very basic UI adjustments for it to be playable on my iPhone with backbone or even iPad mouse & keyboard support, but nothing for a top dollar mobile game.. would not be surprised if I’m refused a refund for making a basic assumption that developers would just use the exact UI with controller support on the highest end & most expensive devices you can play on. Bought it on Xbox for $5 & use remote play. Not as convenient but at least it can be played like an adult.
  • Mixed Feelings

    This game seemed to have everything a good adventure game should have: interesting characters, good story, a little humor, a little creepiness, and a vast amount of locations and objects to explore. Especially at $10, I expected it to be one of my favorite iOS games.
    Unfortunately, I found it very tedious for the most part. Like with most other adventure games and puzzle games, I always find myself looking forward to playing them, but this almost seemed like work. Maybe some people like having a million objects and items to use or click on, and tons of places to try to use these objects on, but it just wasn’t that much fun. I really enjoyed the story, and the characters were cool, but I really wanted to follow the story better and not be spending 90% of the time guessing at what to do next.
    I know that this was a well-made game, and I experienced no user problems. But I was hoping for more puzzle-solving without the use of multiple hints. Sorry