The Forgotten Forest
You enter the forgotten forest but with a purpose though, for even when the place is as it’s called, forgotten, it will not come short of treasures and it will be in the form of 20 magical raspberries. These objects are the reason you are here and now, your adventure begins.
Escape player, scan the forest for these magical raspberries. Be ready for any challenge that comes against you when collecting them, for there will be some knowing that these things are treasures of the place. Bring out your skills and logic, for you are going to need them.
The Forgotten Forest is a little point-and-click item retrieval forest adventure escape game created by Ainars for LoL Escape.
Walkthrough video for The Forgotten Forest
Escape |
Hidden Objects |
Spot The Differences |
Puzzle |

(46 votes, average: 4.89 out of 5)










And again, a great, uncomplicated hidden object game! Thank you, dear Author!
Addressing the players. Once again: in games like these, our esteemed Author doesn’t hide anything specifically – everything is always in plain sight. If something is hidden behind a bush, a leaf, or a cloud (in his other games), then that “top” object will definitely stand out from its surroundings and catch your eye.
If, however, as in this game, you still can’t find an item, start thinking with your head: what does the item look like, what color is it? If you wanted to hide it yourself, but in such a way that it would still be visible, then on WHAT background would you place it, WHAT color? Look in such places. It’s all quite simple.
The problem is that on modern 1080p 16:9 screens, like on a laptop, the game screen does not scale large enough to see things no matter how much screen zoom is adjusted in the browser. I’ve been playing Ainars games since at least 2015, the more detailed the backgrounds have become, the harder it has become to find items. The only way that I can play his most recent games is to hook up my laptop to my 70 inch TV so I can see everything and don’t end up with a pixel hunt.
If I’m not mistaken, the 4:3 aspect ratio is standard for the Flash technology these games are built on. But I’ve already told you: go fullscreen and play in that mode. Isn’t the game’s height filling the entire screen enough for you? If you don’t like the game’s aspect ratio, change your screen’s native resolution. I myself have a 16:9 screen (it’s hard to find a 4:3 screen these days). I find it most comfortable to work with a resolution of 1440×900, but you can also set it to 1680×1050 – both of these modes are 16:10, so the black bars on the sides when playing are smaller than in 16:9 modes.
If you can’t do all of this yourself, I recommend calling a good computer specialist to set up your computer and provide training. If that doesn’t help, then the problem isn’t with the hardware, and you should consult an ophthalmologist.
But I don’t understand: what are you trying to achieve from the game’s Author? Do you want them to rewrite the entire game from scratch on a different engine just for you, find photos with resolutions specifically for your monitor, and replace all the backgrounds with them? What about his old flash games from 2015-2016? What should he do with them? They also have the same aspect ratio because they are also made on Flash – should everything be redone specifically for you as well?
Always a challenge with my aging eyesight, but I’ve been saving this one for a couple of days. Wonderful as always!