While the classic Sierra adventures were part of my childhood in some way, somehow I’ve never played the original King’s Quest games to this day. I know quite a bit about the series and I do own it on GOG since forever ago, but for one reason or the other I’m yet to finally play them. The new game (well, it’s an episodic title from 2015-2016, so it’s not new anymore) didn’t quite interest me at first because I thought it would be yet another attempt to create a Telltale-type adventure with a bunch of QTEs, limited choices (which are far less meaningful than what they want to look) and all the other pitfalls of the type of games. The opening of the very first episode (they’re called Chapters here) only confirmed my expectations, so I’ve ignored this title for years. Until I’ve seen a few reviews that got my interest piqued and I’ve decided to give the game a go. Boy am I glad that I did.
Tag: game review
Happy about: Halo: Reach (MCC)
With my general disinterest in Halo, the only two titles in the series that I’ve always been genuinely curious about weren’t the numbered ones. And now that I’ve played both ODST and Halo: Reach, I am impressed. This one might be the best Halo game from the ones that I’ve played so far. Which is hardly a glowing recommendation, but I did like this one quite a bit.
Thoughts on: The Walking Dead: The Final Season
I was never a huge fan of the Telltale’s The Walking Dead games. I did enjoy the Second season, despite itself in many ways, but the rest of the games were “okay” at best. The first Season was an important chapter for Telltale and it brought a very new take on story-driven adventure titles, examples of which continue to show up and evolve to this day. But it’s 2020 now that I’m writing this, and Telltale Games, as the company it was, is gone. After years of showing how their formula was getting stale, how they simply couldn’t handle the amount of projects they took on developing they closed, never finishing The Walking Dead: The Final Season. Their business was bought by a different company that bought back the rights to some of the old titles and publishes them under the same name, even if the company behind it is different. And that company alongside Skybound Games, both with some of the former Telltale employees, were the ones to finish the game and release the last 2 episodes.
With this kind of troubled development, is The Final Season a great conclusion to the series? I’d say, it’s as good as it could be.
Happy about: Manifold Garden
It feels like ever since Portal the stream of first person puzzle games with new inventive mechanics and ideas has never slowed down. Yet, not every game that gets released turns out to be good, let alone amazing, no matter how cool its mechanics are. Manifold Garden lands on the good side, even if it might never become a classic.
Thoughts on: Amnesia: Rebirth
Ever since the tech demo of Penumbra back in 2006 there hasn’t been a time when I was not excited for what Frictional Games would do next. All of their prior games were surprising, unexpected, often inventive. Even if they weren’t very good (like Penumbra: Requiem), there was something daring and weird, something clever and intriguing about every single one of them. Which is why it’s so shocking to admit just how uninspired and generic Amnesia: Rebirth is.
Thoughts on: Hypnospace Outlaw
Ever since the release of Her Story there’s been a lot of releases which approach the investigation adventuring in a different way, essentially simulating the work of looking through archives. While there were earlier examples of that that worked more like ARGs, like In Memoriam, and other titles that experimented with alternative ways of how a mystery can be solved in an adventure game and what mechanics can it use for doing so, I feel that Her Story was an exact point where people became more open to the idea and started experimenting with it more often. Hypnospace Outlaw in particular is simulating the experience of working as a moderator (Enforcer) inside an Internet-like network called Hypnospace. And it’s more curious than actually fun.
Happy about: Halo 3: ODST (MCC)
Of all the Halo titles, the one that always got me most curious was Halo 3: ODST. A very different approach to story and tone, the more open world like game design and even the uneven fan reception were things that got me interested and now that I’ve finally played it in the Master Chief Collection, I have to say that it was right for me to be intrigued. Maybe this will turn out to be not the best campaign in Halo games, but I’m sure it will remain one of the most unique ones.
Thoughts on: Mask of Mists
There’s something adorable about a simple action adventure title. Go into a new world, explore, find treasures, solve puzzles, kick butt, save the world. All in a matter of a couple of hours. Mask of Mists is charming in its simple almost primitive pleasures. And on one hand it makes you wish for more, but on the other satisfies a very simple need for fun.
Happy about: Vaporum: Lockdown
Almost exactly 3 years ago a Slovakian indie dev studio Fatbot Games, s. r. o. released a grid-based dungeon crawler RPG Vaporum, which managed to exceed all of my expectations. Despite being openly influenced by the genre revival done by Almost Human with Legend of Grimrock titles and unapologetically “borrowing” the style and themes from Bioshock games, it had a voice of its own and played really well. Which is exactly why I bought Vaporum: Lockdown, a prequel originally announced last year, the day it launched. And while it’s not without faults, the game managed to exceed my expectations yet again.
Happy about: Terminator: Resistance
For the past 10 years or so the mid-budget game development has been considered, for all intents and purposes, dead. It used to be that magic range of titles that had a lot of the ambitions of the AAA titles, but on a much lower budget, yet also had a lot of that inventiveness and honesty that’s usually expected from small budget titles. And it could often do things that the indie scene often couldn’t – like working with a movie license. Licensed games, especially those tied to a movie release, also were due for a new “this is actually really great” release, if not on the Chronicles of Riddick: EFBB level, at least something like X-Men Origins: Wolverine. Well, now we have it. Say hello to Terminator: Resistance.