The Dark Eye: Memoria is a Adventure game from Daedalic Entertainment with a 89% positive Steam review signal. Indie Lantern indexes it for players browsing by dark, single-player.

Game snapshot
- Developer
- Daedalic Entertainment
- Release year
- 2013
- Playtime
- Varies by player
- Price
- $1.99
- Review signal
- 89% positive
Screenshots






System requirements
PC
- Minimum
- OS *: Windows Vista/7/8 Processor: 2.5 GHz Single Core Processor or 2 GHz Dual Core Processor Memory: 2500 MB RAM Graphics: OpenGL 2.0 compatible with 512 MB RAM (Shared Memory is not recommended) DirectX: Version 9.0c Storage: 10 GB available space Sound Card: DirectX 9.0c compatible
- Recommended
- OS *: Windows Vista/7/8 Processor: 2.5 GHz Single Core Processor or 2 GHz Dual Core Processor Memory: 2500 MB RAM Graphics: OpenGL 2.0 compatible with 1GB RAM (Shared Memory is not recommended) DirectX: Version 9.0c Storage: 10 GB available space Sound Card: DirectX 9.0c compatible
macOS
- Minimum
- OS: Lion (10.7) Processor: 2 GHz (Dual Core) Intel Memory: 2500 MB RAM Storage: 10 GB available space
From Steam reviews
Review notes
The Dark Eye: Memoria is worth a closer look if you want hand-drawn, strong atmosphere, narrative mystery, and emotional story.
Best for players who want hand-drawn, strong atmosphere, emotional story, and narrative mystery.
Check more carefully if you dislike technical roughness.
hand-drawn
SettingThe look is closer to illustration than generic 3D assets.
strong-atmosphere
ToneThe mood, place, and presentation carry a lot of the experience.
narrative-mystery
Play styleA useful part of the game is piecing together mystery and story threads.
emotional-story
ToneThe story is framed as affecting rather than just plot-heavy.
exploration
Play styleThe draw is moving through spaces, discovering details, and learning the world.
melancholic
ToneThe emotional register is quieter, sadder, or bittersweet.
buggy
FrictionTechnical roughness or instability comes up often enough to check.
narrative-adventure
Play styleThe experience is more story-and-place driven than systems-heavy.
Why it fits
Check it if you want adventure filtered by dark, single-player.
Who might skip it
Research further on Steam if you need verified accessibility details, exact playtime, or current system requirements.