You’ll notice The Little Acre’s lovely hand-drawn art the moment the game starts up. Each character is hand-drawn and animated. It’s a style that is reminiscent of older adventure games like Full Throttle or the Don Bluth animated reflex games such as Dragon’s Lair. I don’t make that comparison lightly. True, the lack of a big budget may be impossible to hide in The Little Acre, but you can see the professional level of work in small details, such as the bounce in Lily’s hem or the cascading crackles of electricity after the transporter powers up. These kinds of small touches can be forgotten, even in big budget, fully-rendered games. Even backgrounds are lovingly rendered, from alien landscapes in cool blue and purple tones, to a yellow, incandescent lit office in a concrete-walled building.
The sounds of The Little Acre are equally as lovely, especially the voice acting. Ok, full disclosure: I am not a fan of Merr, but I can see how some might like his exaggerated drawl. However, the feisty Lily, the pragmatic Aidan, and all the other characters of the game are fun to listen to and feel like real characters due to the care that their voice actors have put into their craft.