
Recently, IGN had a chance to meet up and chill with the talented, decently good looking people over at 5th Cell. The team previously responsible for the "Why's this play better than a kinds game should?" kids game Drawn to Life just now finished work on its second DS project in as many years, with Lock's Quest. IGN has been covering the game for a long while - if you didn't hear about it from them first, you heard it from someone who did - and they have now got a final copy in hand, and also had a chance to step onto the battlefield and rip it up with co-founder and creative director of 5th Cell Jeremiah Slaczka.

The Playasia New Year’s Sale is running until January 4, 2021 with deals on games like The Last of Us Part II Collector’s Edition and Persona 5 Royal Phantom Thieves Edition. Plus, several games are on sale as part of the site’s Weekly Special including Lock’s Quest and Travis Strikes Again: No More Heroes Complete Edition.

It’s not often that a port of a game is regarded with comparable praise to its original version. Usually, ports are clunky games, where sacrifices the developers made to squeeze the title into a compact package are plainly visible. Of course, there are strong examples like Old School RuneScape and some of the Final Fantasy games (such as FFIX), titles that are true to their original versions and outright playable. At $7.99 on Android and $6.99 on iOS, Lock’s Quest sits among these stronger ports, largely due to its inherent mechanics.
HandyGames and THQ Nordic are today very happy to announce that their Tower Defense/RTS/RPG s "Lock's Quest" is now available for iOS and Android devices.