
This means you can input the disc or just download them digitally if previously owned to enjoy the games once more. The list includes Spec Ops: The Line, The Darkness II and The Misadventures of PB WinterBottom as Xbox Backwards Compatible games. Now as of Januwe have three fresh titles available on Xbox One and further consoles sourced from the Xbox 360. The latest batch of Xbox Backwards Compatible games are now available bringing three new titles to the program. Winterbottom is well worth your time and your money.Spec Ops: The Line, The Darkness 2 & Misadventures of PB WinterBottom Xbox Backwards Compatible The visuals and soundtrack are both amazing, and even more impressive once you consider how small of a team developed the game. The whole game is done in the style of a 1940's era silent cartoon, coupled with an amazing Danny Elfman-like score, and the end result is a very Tim Burton-esque vibe. Where Winterbottom truly shines, though, is its atmosphere.

After finishing the main story levels, a series of challenge levels open up, asking you to finish levels under time and clone number restraints, really adding to the replay value. While a couple will have you scratching your head, none of the puzzles are as frustrating and complicated as Braid's ridiculous levels. You must use these clones to synchronize a complicated series of jumps and switches, all with a set amount of clones you can have during a level. He is a pie thief by trade who, while chasing a giant monster pie, falls into a temporal rift that gives him the power to create clones of himself which he must interact with to steal all the pies in a level.

Winterbottom is the story of the titular character, a dapper gentleman in a bowler and monocle. This isn't necessarily an unfair point, as both games feature mind-destroying out of the ordinary puzzles. Winterbottom has inevitably drawn comparisons to Braid, the indie darling otherwise known as Pretentious Metaphor-Fest.
