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Everything posted by biosynth8
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It doesn't. It has less of an open world than Dark Souls. There are classic levels, they are rather long and you can return to them, but they are seperate levels with no connection between them. Apart from that, it's an interesting game with a fresh setting. It's competently made, the graphics are good. But... it's not really good. Thin story, kind of bland in general. They tried to make the settings rather realistic, which means you are mainly walking through similar streets most of the time. This isn't helped by the fact that many assets for buildings are re-used several times in each levels. I got lost all the time. It's also suprisingly easy. You get a freeze gun early on and it works on almost every boss. You also have a wide variety of weapons to make the game more difficult for you - or only use the chain weapons, that keep you out of reach of many enemies.
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It's not an old school fps. It's more akin to shooters of the late 2010s - dashing, no quick saving, special abilities. I didn't like it.
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The first one is better, especially atmosphere-wise.
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Not bad, but in the end it's just another retro shooter.
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I might play this for the architecture alone. Maybe on discount.
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I like what they are going for, but it looks rather monotonous. Poolcore is a varied aesthetic.
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I've added this to my whislist, too. It's not a procedually generated world, so I'm kind of excited to play it - as soon as there's a discount.
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I think it's trying too hard to be weird. It's kind of a bland aimless weirdness.
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I kind of expected more from it. It's cute, funny and the gameplay is absolutely fine ... but I just thought there would be more about the Cylinder than just a glorified system for enclosing levels.
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This feels very oldschool. It reminded me a bit of Alone in the Dark: New Nightmare (2001). The biggest problem is that it's kind of boring. As Arseniy mentioned, the writing is weak and the gameplay isn't anything special either. I'd rather play Alone in the Dark.Other Media
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I had no trouble finding a cheap copy after reading this thread. Getting it to run took only a bit of effort. It's really a decent game.
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I wouldn't really call it obscure, but it's hard to get nowadays. I played it some time after it came out, I think I rented a copy from our local library back then. I might also still have a disc around but, I don't think I want to go through all that work to get it running again. I remember kind of liking it for the atmosphere, but I disliked the gameplay. I can absolutely understand that it's a game you can easily get obsessed with. It's from that short era where graphics in 3D games were decent and used creativly. Most of the time you only get one of the two.
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From what I can gather now, the game is too simplistic for it's own good. It wants to be a survival and crafting game with those meditation mechanics slapped on top, but nothing is really deep. Your mental bar is just another status you have to keep topping up by looking for the right resources (domes) and waiting for a while. I'm most disappointed by the survival mechanics. While there are different kinds of afflictions, like pathogenes and poison, they don't make a different. Any kind of affliction basicly means you die within a day if you don't find a way to treat it. Nothing goes away by itself, so your health bar in this situation is only a timer. Your character also stays fit as a fiddle until the very last moment. You can also only get one condition at a time, so have fun dancing on snakes when you drank bad water. This wouldn't be so bad if survival games of this kind weren't a dime a dozend nowadays. Many have done similar mechanics and most have done it better. Well, I'm only some hours in, so I'll post again when I've finished it.
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I'm sure it's fun with friends, but playing it alone just gets boring and repetetive.
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This game just keeps going on and on. It's the proof that a game can be too well balanced - it keeps the same difficulty up for hours and hours without any challanges.
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Great retro shooter, the only downside is the checkpoint-based save system. The developers implemented it somwhere in early access to "add challenge" but it's not the right game for that. There are mods to use a normal quicksave system, though.
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The developers are German and think Reh is the female Hirsch. Consequently, everything in the game feels kind of stupid and half-assed. Building and action seems to symbolize rather than show. The easiest example is that you have to build a landing stage in the tiniest pond to enable your workers to fetch water. It takes the beatiful simplicity of a Banished, overthinks it and breaks it completely.
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I really tried to like this game, really. The weirdness of the NPCs, the voiceacting, the menues and the sound design are just top notch. The story, however, isn't up to it. And finally the gameplay is just horrible. You have to walk all over the maps, even in corners where you have no reason to go to, just to make objects pop up near to you. If you don't have an item you need for a certain task, you just have to comb every map you've allready been to to see where you missed a spot. There's usually no indication where an object can be found and they are only visible once you walk past them. There's a moral system in the game. It's the kind where you can either be helpful and friendly to everyone or kick puppies - quite literally, since you have a robot dog companion you can be unreasonable emotionally cruel to. I hate moral systems like this, there's just no moral dilemma, just black and white. People tell me that there are also awful minigames, but I never got that far.
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I really liked the atmosphere. A very competent Soulslike, earsily better than the Surge. However, it kept messing with my internet connection so I had to stop playing it.
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Another Soulsborne-like. From what I gathered up to now it's a toned-down Bloodborne with less violence and an even more convoluted storyline.
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Looks like a Blasphemous ripoff, but kind of nice.
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I'm going to try this out when it goes on sale.
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I wouldn't consider it obscure either. It was the reason to buy a new PC at its day, and the Unreal engines still bear its name. You couldn't be more wrong. I assume you didn't play it back in the day. Some consider it a milestone in term of storytelling and graphics. But while this was impressive, it was really a pinnacle in level- and worldbuilding. The most lasting effect however was its multiplayer mode, especially the competent bots. This was so great that the later installations - Unreal Tournament - just focused on this aspect. Quake III Arena, that you posted a pictue of, came out a whole year later and it tried to copy it. Quite badly, I thought at the time. Duke Nukem 3D is still a sprite-based game. I don't know in which way you mean that this is similar. Sadly, it never had a worthy sequel. Unreal 2 pretty much trashed all the aspects that made Unreal good and is just another bland early 2000s FPS.
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Oh, I remember playing this. The best feature where the light effects, they were praised by the magazines. The gameplay... honestly, even at the time I didn't understand what they were trying to achieve. Some kind of street-level Forsaken, probably. But it endend up as a really akward and boring shooter. Maybe I remember it wrong, though. I have to try it again, maybe next week.
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Nice game, very metal. I got bored halfway through, though.