Alone in the Dark from 2008 (also known as Alone in the Dark: Inferno on PS3) might be the last truly ambitious game of the last 20 years. That’s one hell of a statement to make, but I have good reasons to say it – what this game attempted to create is on a level that has not been attempted since. Possibly because the game didn’t turn out great and wasn’t positively received. I loved it back in 2008 even now for how frustrating a lot of the game is, I cannot help but love the effort and potential. While at the same time knowing well, that I can’t really recommend playing this game to the majority of people.
Tag: Ugly duckling
Ugly duckling: Tribes: Vengeance
There’s just nothing quite like Tribes. A huge sci-fi universe Dynamix created long ago and explored through their mech simulator games, strategies and fast paced multiplayer-only FPS titles definitely has interesting story and ideas to it, even if not exactly novel. But it wasn’t the story that made Tribes be as exciting and incredible as it is… I mean, they are those “multiplayer-only FPS titles” mentioned before, there’s not a much story needed for those to be good. Far future, different Tribes of people with jetpacks locked in an eternal conflict that, for whatever reason uses the typical classic FPS rules of “capture the flag” to win over each other – that’s all you need to know. The rest is speed, inertia, skiing over the ground and using projectile-based weaponry across gigantic levels to somehow snipe enemies flying through the air.
And yet, somehow, Tribes: Vengeance exists – a singleplayer first game with really heavy emphasis on story. Made by Irrational Games, fresh off their success with System Shock 2 and Freedom Fighters and soon to get even more love with SWAT 4 and then, of course, BioShock. And this game, for whatever reason, was very quickly dropped by the publisher Vivendi Universal Games and was all but forgotten.
Ugly duckling: F.E.A.R. 3
I’d call the third entry in the F.E.A.R. series an odd one out if not for the fact that the entire franchise has been quite odd. Nonetheless, F.E.A.R. 3 tends to be the least liked entry, at least discounting expansions and DLCs, and there are plenty of mostly good reasons for that. The most minor of which, possibly, is the pretty tasteless stylization of the title as F.3.A.R. When it came out, I was rather cold on it, but did find plenty of things to enjoy. Since then, more history of its development became known and replaying it in 2023 made me appreciate what was attempted here more. Even if the end result is not great.
Ugly duckling: Cold Fear
Cold Fear is a game I like revisiting from time to time. It is an ugly duckling alright and although the game has great ambitions and plenty potential to be something amazing, the experience of actually playing it can be frustrating. And with each next playthrough I found more and more things to get frustrated by as the game starts playing worse on modern hardware and as my patience for outdated concepts gets smaller. I still enjoyed revisiting it this time a lot, but a lot of people will quite likely not find it fun the way I do.
Ugly duckling: Jade Empire: Special Edition
I’ve played Jade Empire just once – in 2007 when it got ported to PC as Special Edition. And while I remembered liking the story, that was all I could recall about it. I’ve considered revisiting the title for quite some time, but was never in the mood up until recently. Now that I’ve replayed it, I’m not surprised I didn’t remember the gameplay – it’s not good.
Ugly duckling: Stranglehold
Now this is a curious one. By 2007 “bullet time” was no longer a hot new thing, in fact the last official The Matrix game was already 2 years old, while The Matrix Online was just 2 years away from closing. John Woo has also been long past his prime and Hard Boiled, the original movie the game is a sequel to, was from 1992. Heroic bloodshed and gun fu/gun kata were no longer popular either. So why is it exactly Stranglehold came to be is a bit of a mystery. But if nothing else, this title was ambitious and it does impress in many ways.
Ugly duckling: Enter the Matrix, Path of Neo
Ugly duckling is a series of posts talking about games that could’ve been great, but were not.
Some licensed tie-in games are loved, some are forgotten. Some are fun to play, some are not. Some are very budget minded and simple, some are ambitious. The games based around The Matrix were ambitious and quite curious. Though, perhaps, the most successful and arguably fun of them was The Matrix Online, that I won’t be talking about here. Still, both action titles in the franchise – Enter the Matrix and The Matrix: Path of Neo, – were games I was considering replaying for a while now. Intrigued if I will like them more than I did back when they just came out. And I suppose I did. Though, not by much.
Ugly duckling: Vanquish
Ugly duckling reviews usually cover games that have a potential to be something amazing, but for one or the other reason fail to reach that goal. Which might leave you wondering – why am I covering Vanquish under this category? Well, there are reasons for that.
Ugly duckling: Martian Gothic: Unification
Ugly duckling is a series of posts talking about games that could’ve been great, but were not.
I’ve talked about my love for Dead Space many times. When it was released in 2008, lots of people were excited about the first [RE-like] survival horror in space. But that’s not true. Dead Space was the first good (I’d say great) RE-like survival horror in space. 8 years before it, though, another survival horror in space was released, first on PC, then on PS1. It was called Martian Gothic: Unification, and it was, unless I’m mistaken, the first. Curiously, Dead Space even shares some concepts with this game. But the main difference between them is that unlike with Dead Space, it’s playing Martian Gothic isn’t that fun.
Ugly duckling: T.R.A.G.
Ugly duckling is a series of posts talking about games that could’ve been great, but were not.
You probably never heard of T.R.A.G. (T.R.A.G.: Tactical Rescue Assault Group – Mission of Mercy or Hard Edge) until seeing this post or, at least, until listening to the collections of top worst videogame voice acting. But hey, since you’re here, check this: T.R.A.G. is a bizarre mix of survival horror, jRPG, beat em up/slasher/fighting and lots and lots of stupidest anime tropes imaginable. I mean, even if its most likely stupid, at least it sounds intriguing, right?