Putting the 'role' back in role-playing games since 2002.
Donate to Codex
Good Old Games
  • Welcome to rpgcodex.net, a site dedicated to discussing computer based role-playing games in a free and open fashion. We're less strict than other forums, but please refer to the rules.

    "This message is awaiting moderator approval": All new users must pass through our moderation queue before they will be able to post normally. Until your account has "passed" your posts will only be visible to yourself (and moderators) until they are approved. Give us a week to get around to approving / deleting / ignoring your mundane opinion on crap before hassling us about it. Once you have passed the moderation period (think of it as a test), you will be able to post normally, just like all the other retards.

Atomic Heart - open world first-person shooter set in an alternate universe Soviet Union

Wunderbar

Arcane
Joined
Nov 15, 2015
Messages
8,825
So if this game is pro-Societ Union wouldn't that make Bioshock Infinite pro-America or what am i missing?
You didn't play infinite did you?
he's implying that Atomic Heart is probably just as pro-Soviet as Bioshock was pro-American. The game likely has the typical plot of evil commies keeping a nice utopian facade while conducting inhumane experiments on gulaged dissidents.
 
Last edited:

Edgetard

Educated
Joined
Jan 27, 2023
Messages
181
Location
Hell
TL;DR

Devs are pro-imperialist scum and if you buy the game, you help the Russian moloch to back this war.
Ah, Mohov, I just love all those subhuman hohol untermensch hatred and rage. Their neolithic mentality always prevails.
ycBvLA.jpeg
Meanwhile Azov and right sector are IN Ukraine fighting the Russians I don't think the dudes hoisting the banner that read fuck you Ukraine will remain white are going to tolerate this faggot
 

Lyric Suite

Converting to Islam
Joined
Mar 23, 2006
Messages
58,621
So if this game is pro-Societ Union wouldn't that make Bioshock Infinite pro-America or what am i missing?
You didn't play infinite did you?
he's implying that Atomic Heart is probably just as pro-Soviet as Bioshock was pro-American. The game likely has the typical plot of evil commies keeping a nice utopian facade while conducting inhumane experiments on gulaged dissidents.

Right, that's what i automatically assumed.

Is there even any indication this isn't the case? Even without the example of Bioshock whenever i see this kind of in your face glorification of the past in a sci-fi game i automatically assume it's satirical.
 

Zlaja

Arcane
Joined
Aug 17, 2006
Messages
6,226
Location
Swedex
I wish the protagonist of this game would shut the fuck up. Last game I played was Ion Fury, and in that game you had the option in the settings to mute the protagonist. Such a feature would be great for this game.

I also don't like how tedious the melee combat seems in the trailers. I hope it's not mandatory to bash everyone's skull in all the time.
 

JDR13

Arcane
Joined
Nov 2, 2006
Messages
4,002
Location
The Swamp
I still doubt this game is finished, this is shaping up to be another Cyberpunk launch with the amount of overhyping the game is getting, all the in-engine stuff looks extremely tailored for trailers, the only difference this time will be all the alleged free-thinkers coming out to bat for this game even after they figure out it's a broken mess.
This is why I'm not buying this game, it looks too good to be true
But my side of the political isle is well known for having contrarians who will eat shit to "own the libs" so I can see Ivan making a killing from this. Shame really that this retard is going to sell more copies then he realizes

"If you're the type of person who is still going to buy and play hogwarts legacy despite its infamy..."
I hate these morons

Guy who made that video is a butthurt faggot. I'm literally going to buy an extra copy now after watching that.
 

Edgetard

Educated
Joined
Jan 27, 2023
Messages
181
Location
Hell
I still doubt this game is finished, this is shaping up to be another Cyberpunk launch with the amount of overhyping the game is getting, all the in-engine stuff looks extremely tailored for trailers, the only difference this time will be all the alleged free-thinkers coming out to bat for this game even after they figure out it's a broken mess.
This is why I'm not buying this game, it looks too good to be true
But my side of the political isle is well known for having contrarians who will eat shit to "own the libs" so I can see Ivan making a killing from this. Shame really that this retard is going to sell more copies then he realizes

"If you're the type of person who is still going to buy and play hogwarts legacy despite its infamy..."
I hate these morons

Guy who made that video is a butthurt faggot. I'm literally going to buy an extra copy now after watching that.

Journalist is a journalist more news at 11
 

Lyric Suite

Converting to Islam
Joined
Mar 23, 2006
Messages
58,621
I still doubt this game is finished, this is shaping up to be another Cyberpunk launch with the amount of overhyping the game is getting, all the in-engine stuff looks extremely tailored for trailers, the only difference this time will be all the alleged free-thinkers coming out to bat for this game even after they figure out it's a broken mess.
This is why I'm not buying this game, it looks too good to be true
But my side of the political isle is well known for having contrarians who will eat shit to "own the libs" so I can see Ivan making a killing from this. Shame really that this retard is going to sell more copies then he realizes

"If you're the type of person who is still going to buy and play hogwarts legacy despite its infamy..."
I hate these morons

Guy who made that video is a butthurt faggot. I'm literally going to buy an extra copy now after watching that.

Journalist is a journalist more news at 11


Not gonna bother watching that shit. What's his argument as to why we should boycott this game?
 
Joined
Mar 3, 2018
Messages
7,930
Not gonna bother watching that shit. What's his argument as to why we should boycott this game?
Don't consoom this product because it has tenuous ties to putler's rebirth of the soviet union and it will fund the genocide of every ukrainian through warcrimesssss.

t. Retarded faggot slurping up product from chyna and culture rot from kwa.
 

Fargus

Arcane
Joined
Apr 2, 2012
Messages
4,209
Location
Mosqueow
"Oy vey. Gamers dare to not outright hate on a game made by evil russkies when we tell them to do it! Gamer goyim doesn't care about our sufferings! There is a chance they might even enjoy it! Nooooooo curse you commie sex robots!!!!!!1 ;("

Before you get to dictate what should be shut down you need achieve the jew victim card tier or at least the nigger one. Ukrainian victim card doesn't work considering that most westerner normies dont even know where it is and just want a new shiny AAA turd lol.

Also it releases before sralker 2
ree-pepe.gif
 

SharkClub

Prophet
Patron
Joined
May 27, 2010
Messages
1,586
Strap Yourselves In
Guy who made that video is a butthurt faggot. I'm literally going to buy an extra copy now after watching that.
Such a free-thinker, doing exactly what the developer wants you to do, definitely not NPC cattle behavior. Good goy, get caught up in the culture war, it helps their wallets fatten.

How about buying a game after you find out if it's good or not? I realize it's probably too much to ask in this current age of consooming product based on one's beliefs that change as quickly as the wind turns in order to be opposite the mainstream opinion.
 

ArchAngel

Arcane
Joined
Mar 16, 2015
Messages
21,658
Guy who made that video is a butthurt faggot. I'm literally going to buy an extra copy now after watching that.
Such a free-thinker, doing exactly what the developer wants you to do, definitely not NPC cattle behavior. Good goy, get caught up in the culture war, it helps their wallets fatten.

How about buying a game after you find out if it's good or not? I realize it's probably too much to ask in this current age of consooming product based on one's beliefs that change as quickly as the wind turns in order to be opposite the mainstream opinion.
No need to guess, it is coming to Game Pass on Day1. I will be playing it "free".
 

JDR13

Arcane
Joined
Nov 2, 2006
Messages
4,002
Location
The Swamp
Guy who made that video is a butthurt faggot. I'm literally going to buy an extra copy now after watching that.
Such a free-thinker, doing exactly what the developer wants you to do, definitely not NPC cattle behavior. Good goy, get caught up in the culture war, it helps their wallets fatten.

How about buying a game after you find out if it's good or not? I realize it's probably too much to ask in this current age of consooming product based on one's beliefs that change as quickly as the wind turns in order to be opposite the mainstream opinion.
You're a special kind of retard, aren't you?
 

jebsmoker

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Nov 17, 2019
Messages
2,688
Insert Title Here Strap Yourselves In I helped put crap in Monomyth

Why are people arguing about Atomic Heart?

By Joshua Wolens
published 42 minutes ago

Mundfish's retro-future Soviet shooter has stirred up a whole lot of controversy.


Atomic Heart was a bolt from the blue when its first trailer dropped in 2018 (opens in new tab), showcasing a shining Soviet retrofuture FPS that seemed like it was learning all the right lessons from BioShock, Stalker, and the Metro series. Never mind that it was the debut game from a new developer—a Russian studio called Mundfish—it was laser-targeted at a category of players who devoured immersive sims and ambitious-but-flawed works of genius from East European studios alike. It very quickly became an object of internet obsession, a game we were intrigued by but knew very little about (opens in new tab).

But a lot has happened since then. In February last year, Russia invaded Ukraine, starting a war that has killed thousands on both sides and sparked one of the biggest refugee crises in modern history, with millions of Ukrainians fleeing abroad (opens in new tab) to escape the war at home. Russia became an overnight pariah in the west, excised from fundamental mechanisms (opens in new tab) in the international banking system, deserted by some of the biggest corporations in the world—including several gaming titans (opens in new tab)—and censured in the UN.

A general view shows voting results during a UN General Assembly emergency meeting to discuss Russian annexations in Ukraine at the UN headquarters in New York City on October 12, 2022. - The United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday overwhelmingly voted to condemn Russia's annexations of parts of Ukraine after Moscow vetoed a similar effort in the Security Council.
(Image credit: ED JONES/AFP via Getty Images)

In the wake of that invasion, Atomic Heart's Russian provenance became more than an interesting detail of the game's development. As many kinds of Russian art found itself subject to intense scrutiny and swift bans (opens in new tab), rumours began to swirl about Mundfish's investors and excited fans feared their purchase would somehow end up funding a brutal war. Even though Mundfish says it's based in Cyprus, gamers are still arguing about whether it's okay to buy Atomic Heart.

An equivocal statement on the war

Although some kind of debate has gone on around Atomic Heart since Russia first invaded Ukraine, it was brought to the fore by a tweet from Mundfish (opens in new tab) last January. In response to questions about where the studio stood in regards to the war, Mundfish tweeted that it was "a global team focused on an innovative game and is undeniably a pro-peace organization against violence against people," and did not "comment on politics or religion".

It also tweeted that it didn't "condone contributors or spammers with offensive, hateful, discriminatory, violent, or threatening language or content," and, indeed, has been criticised for blocking users that ask about its position on the war (opens in new tab).



It was not the statement of support for Ukrainian independence that some were hoping for. Mundfish's reticence to even name the war in question sparked outrage, summed up by tweets from game designer Sergey Mohov (opens in new tab), who mocked Mundfish's position as "We're for all the good things and against all the bad ones," lambasting the studio for "having the unbelievable privilege to have this kind of position".

"We're for all the good things and against all the bad ones"
Sergey Mohov mocks Mundfish's statement

Mundfish's statements that it was only interested in "getting Atomic Heart into the hands of gamers everywhere," or that it was "For players who just want to play (opens in new tab)," struck some people as, at best, a marketing attempt to redirect the conversation surrounding its game or, at worst, some kind of tacit support for the actions of its original home country. A video from a Ukrainian YouTuber titled "Please, Don't Buy Atomic Heart (opens in new tab)"—which has managed to accrue nearly 2 million views in just over a week—highlighted the absurdity of a game based around an alt-history USSR claiming it doesn't "comment on politics," calling it "absolute nonsense" and "one step away from the types of gamers who say 'I don't like politics in my videogames' and then immediately open up Fallout".



On the other hand, whether it's headquartered in Cyprus or not, Mundfish is a studio with Russian roots and Russian staff (with Russian family and Russian friends), as a 2019 article documenting a tour of its Moscow office (opens in new tab) will attest. The Russian state has taken a hard line against any and all internal protest against its so-called "special military operation (opens in new tab)" in Ukraine, arresting thousands of protestors (opens in new tab), threatening years in prison camps (opens in new tab) over anti-war social media posts, and charging a political opposition figure with treason (opens in new tab) for "spreading disinformation" about the Russian army.

Even when Russia isn't at war, the country maintains a deeply alienating political system that has entrenched power among a cabal of lackeys and oligarchs for decades. The Russian political scientist and anti-war activist Greg Yudin described this system (opens in new tab) as one that generates "incredible contempt and disdain for all kinds of politics" among Russians, who are "completely certain that there is no possible way to change anything through politics, that no change is possible in general".

Marking oneself as anti-war in that kind of environment is an act of profound courage and incredible risk. It could be that Mundfish's tweet was an ungraceful attempt to thread a political needle without jeopardising itself, its staff, or those associated with either.

I've reached out to the studio to ask about its statement on the war, and I'll update this section if I hear back.

Atomic Heart - In first person, the main character holds a rocket launcher pointed at approaching robots with scythe arms while an explosion goes off in a field behind them.
(Image credit: Mundfish)
(opens in new tab)

Following the money: Mundfish's investors

In early 2021, over a year before Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine, Mundfish announced that it had secured funding (opens in new tab) from three key investors: Tencent, GEM Capital, and Gaijin Entertainment (the maker of War Thunder). Tencent is, well, Tencent, the Chinese tech behemoth that owns whole segments of the gaming industry (opens in new tab), from a piece of Epic Games, Discord, and Ubisoft to Riot Games in its entirety. But the other two quickly became more controversial in the wake of the invasion, with audiences placing both companies under the microscope to figure out where they stood in relation to the war, and whether they might be financially supporting the Russian state.

Here's what's definitely true: GEM Capital founder Anatoliy Paliy worked as first deputy general director for a Gazprom subsidiary (opens in new tab)—Gazprom Gazenergoset—in the past, before going into business for himself alongside other Gazprom management types in the 2010s (opens in new tab). Gazprom is Russia's state-run energy giant which generates scads of cash for the government, has been instrumental in the ongoing economic warfare between Russia and the west, and which was reported to be creating its own private military company (opens in new tab) as recently as last week.

Atomic Heart is also being distributed via VKPlay (opens in new tab) in Russia—after sanctions led Steam to effectively end business (opens in new tab) there—and a few other countries. VKPlay is run by VKontakte, a social media company often referred to as 'Russia's Facebook' over which Gazprom has effective control (opens in new tab) via investments made by subsidiaries and affiliate companies.

Vladimir Putin, Russia's prime minister, left, speaks to Alexei Miller, chief executive officer of OAO Gazprom, during the opening ceremony of the new Nord Stream pipeline near Vyborg, Russia, on Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2011. Gazprom will today start pumping natural gas into a $10 billion subsea pipeline from Russia to Germany, bypassing Ukraine, where disputes halted supplies to European customers twice since 2006.
Russian president Vladimir Putin at the 2011 opening of the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, in which Gazprom is a major partner. (Image credit: Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr./Bloomberg via Getty Images)
(opens in new tab)

Whether or not Paliy is personally associated with this or that infamous Russian oligarch is more tenuous and difficult to concretely establish, but GEM was still wheeling and dealing in the Russian energy sector as recently as 2021 (opens in new tab). It's hardly out of the realm of possibility that a businessman with Gazprom ties and investments in Russian energy—the sector where several oligarchs make their money—would be on first-name terms with some of Russia's ruling elite.

Gaijin, meanwhile, came under fire for a reason that's far easier to parse. In 2021, midroll ads for Gaijin's games appeared in videos shot by a YouTuber in an area of the Donetsk People's Republic (opens in new tab), a pro-Russian separatist region of Ukraine that the Ukrainian government considers occupied territory (and which was recognised by Russia as a sovereign state (opens in new tab) just prior to the 2022 invasion). The War Thunder logo was also visibly spray-painted onto props used in the video.

When questioned, Gaijin said it didn't directly buy YouTube ads (opens in new tab) on any channel "except a handful of extremely big ones". All others, it claimed, were bought through YouTube itself or through advertising agencies. Gaijin said it doesn't "provide political support to anyone anywhere," and knows "nothing about politics and [prefers] to stay out of it". The videos in question were made private, and Gaijin, in a statement echoing Mundfish's own, said it prefers "to talk about games and games only".

An image showing off the electro-shock powers and combat in Atomic Heart
(Image credit: Mundfish)
(opens in new tab)

GEM Capital told games journalist Kirk McKeand that it has no Russian investments as of 2022 (opens in new tab) (like Mundfish, it now says it's Cyprus-based), and Gaijin's headquarters are in Hungary. Nevertheless, it seems unlikely that no money earned by Mundfish and its investors from Atomic Heart's sales will end up in the pockets of the Russian state, if only by taxation on whatever interests they still have in the country, so a refusal to purchase the game on those grounds seems pretty justified, but some people have rankled at what they perceive as a double standard here.

An Arabic Resetera user going by the name Al-Dylan summed this viewpoint up in post (opens in new tab) which said it was hurtful to see people advocate only for boycotts "against Russia (and not even against Russia for how they helped destroy Syria, only for what they are doing in Ukraine)," while nothing is said "against the US for how they financed terrorists, invaded and completely destroyed our countries for decades, or Israel and its apartheid regime against Palestinians, or Saudi Arabia for what they've done not only in Yemen, but in the whole region by funding wahabist [sic] groups".

After all, we exist in a world in which companies like Nintendo enjoy direct investments (opens in new tab) from the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund, Activision employs a former politician who defended torture (opens in new tab) under the Bush administration, the military uses videogames as a recruitment tool (opens in new tab), and Call of Duty worked with a man who helped fund right-wing death squads (opens in new tab) in Nicaragua. To some people participating in the debate around Atomic Heart, it seemed arbitrary to boycott that game for its possible ties, but to let so much else slip by. Though, of course, the takeaway from this probably isn't that Atomic Heart shouldn't be criticised, but that far more games should be.

Atomic Heart — a first-person screenshot from Atomic Heart, with the protagonist using telekinesis to lift the disintegrating corpse of a human-plant zombie hybrid.
(Image credit: Mundfish)
(opens in new tab)

I've asked Mundfish about these issues, too, and I'll update this section if I receive a response.

Fetishising the USSR

The takeaway from this probably isn't that Atomic Heart shouldn't be criticised, but that far more games should be

Atomic Heart lives and breathes Soviet kitsch, but not everyone finds it quaint. In particular, an event held for Russian games media drew criticism for its seemingly uncritical reproduction of Soviet revolutionary bombast: The walls were festooned with slogans reading things like "Glory to Soviet engineers," everything was swathed in red, and in general the entire thing felt like a psychedelic retrofuture take on Stalin's funeral (opens in new tab).



To some, it felt like Mundfish—which has drawn criticism for downplaying its Russian roots (opens in new tab) in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine—was actively celebrating the legacy of the Soviet Union, with all the connotations of 'unity' between Russia and Ukraine that entails. Sergey Mohov spoke up again, suggesting that the notion that Atomic Heart would be critical of the Soviet Union was clearly false given the nature of the event. (opens in new tab) The fact that the game's protagonist—Major Nechaev—is an agent of the Soviet KGB has also raised eyebrows as onlookers worry the game might attempt to rehabilitate the notorious Soviet intelligence service.

Given that the game isn't out yet, there's not much to go on here beyond the screenshots, trailers, and brief hands-on sessions (opens in new tab) we've gotten so far from Atomic Heart. But we do know that the central narrative of the game centres around a bloody disaster at a Soviet research facility, where the robotic servants that are meant to tend to man's needs have become unhinged and started murdering them instead. The theme here seems to be one of a utopian vision with a rotten, eventually-fatal flaw in its foundation, which has been a recurring theme in anti-Soviet art and literature since there's been anti-Soviet art and literature.

When I got to play the game recently, I felt like I had the narrative figured out in the first 10 minutes: Your Soviet philosopher-king boss will turn out to be a bad guy and the dissidents he tasks you to hunt down will end up being right all along. I could be wrong, of course, and it could be the case that Atomic Heart ends up taking an uncritically apologetic view on the USSR, but that'd be quite a left-turn based on what we've seen so far.

An image of a Soviet city in Atomic Heart, strewn with advertisements and propaganda.

So, should I buy Atomic Heart?

In the opaque bramble of our global economy, we're all put in the difficult position to buy stuff that may be financially entangled with people, causes, or governments that, say, commit unspeakable atrocities. If we buy Hogwarts Legacy, are we indirectly supporting (opens in new tab) JK Rowling's transphobic comments? If we buy Call of Duty, are we endorsing Activision Blizzard's harmful labour practices? And if we buy Atomic Heart, are we, through some winding, invisible scheme, backing Russia's war against Ukraine?

We all have to make that decision ourselves. Personally I think the frustration felt by Ukrainians whose homes are being destroyed with Mundfish's vague, equivocal statements is entirely understandable. But I don't think there's enough concrete evidence to condemn the studio as a whole as 'pro-war' or anything like it. I suspect Mundfish, like millions of Russians, had the rug pulled out from under it by the start of a war it didn't ask for, and its moves since have been a clumsy attempt to navigate uncharted and choppy waters.

If you're interested in grappling more with this tough moral question, someone basically made four seasons of a TV show about it: The Good Place (opens in new tab), a philosophical 2016 comedy basically about how it's impossible to get into heaven because modern society is unavoidably complicated.


TL;DR

Devs are pro-imperialist scum and if you buy the game, you help the Russian moloch to back this war.

have mundfish devs actually repeated russian foreign policy talking points or are you just blowing hot air. if they haven't, then this is just conjecture.
 

jebsmoker

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Nov 17, 2019
Messages
2,688
Insert Title Here Strap Yourselves In I helped put crap in Monomyth
if you're concerned about a fraction of atomic heart's sales going to tax revenue via sales tax, there isn't anything you can do about that besides pirating (although i don't really view pirating as something defensible unless if games are insanely expensive where you live, or if the game you want in question is abandonware and second-hand copies of it go for like 400 dollars). ice pick lodge's founder is explicitly anti-war, but still has to live with the reality of a small fraction of pathologic 2's sales funding missiles and tanks or whatever (besides funding infrastructure and such)

just deal. games cost money to make
 
Last edited:

ArchAngel

Arcane
Joined
Mar 16, 2015
Messages
21,658
if you're concerned about a fraction of atomic heart's sales going to tax revenue via sales tax, there isn't anything you can do about that besides pirating (although i don't really view pirating as something defensible unless if games are insanely expensive where you live, or if the game you want in question is abandonware and second-hand copies of it go for like 400 dollars). ice pick lodge's founder is explicitly anti-war, but still has to live with the reality of a small fraction of pathologic 2's sales funding missiles and tanks or whatever (besides funding infrastructure and such)

just deal. games cost money to make
They are all hypocrites. I wonder how much they boycotted USA products when USA was doing coups in South America, waging war in Vietnam, Iraq (twice), Afghanistan, sending weapons to terrorists in Syria, doing a coup in Haiti and doing shitty things all over Africa... of course they didn't LOL

And if there are Germans that are still promoting and buying USA products after they destroyed your gas pipeline with Russia are also retards and hypocrites.
 

jebsmoker

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Nov 17, 2019
Messages
2,688
Insert Title Here Strap Yourselves In I helped put crap in Monomyth
i mean you can fully commit to pirating games if you dont wanna fund any foreign country but id also rather not have bitcoin miners installed on my computer
 
Joined
Mar 15, 2021
Messages
188
Devs are pro-imperialist scum and if you buy the game, you help the Russian moloch to back this war.
Russia as an entity cannot exist outside of empire so I certainly hope the profits of this game keeps its brave heroes in New Russia well stocked with ammunition and arms. However, there are far better ways of lending monetary support than purchasing popamole, and certainly much greater ways of experiencing Russian culture. As such I suggest to the person liable to reactionary behaviour to, instead of buying a video game out of spite or as a social posture, give the Russian opera a shot and donate money directly to the cause.

 

Spukrian

Savant
Joined
May 28, 2016
Messages
882
Location
Lost Continent of Mu
So if I understand correctly, the developers refuse to comment on current issues and therefore idiots assume they suppport the war? Good to know.
 

jebsmoker

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Nov 17, 2019
Messages
2,688
Insert Title Here Strap Yourselves In I helped put crap in Monomyth
if your choice is getting either alive by vatniks or people who dehumanize all russians, perhaps it's better to not say anything and just let them duke it out
 

Siel

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Aug 25, 2013
Messages
907
Location
Some refined shithole
I couldn't care less about "controversies" around this shit but this game looks so on-rails in every trailer I see popping. Even Bioshit Infinite didn't look so linear, this looks Call of Duty campaign tier.
Maybe that's just because trailers but this doesn't look good at all right now.
 

Luka-boy

Arcane
Joined
Sep 24, 2014
Messages
1,696
Location
Asspain
Oh wow that is hilarious. The main character's voice acting is just a tiny step above the original Resident Evil for the PSX. And he won't shut up either :lol:
 
Joined
Jan 31, 2023
Messages
57
Late to the party, but here's some streamerless footage:


So far, I'm liking the fact that this is an actual game, not just visual bait. Even after some notable journos played it I sort of remained in doubt. The whole game has an uncanny feeling to it, both visuals and the development itself. I like menu ambient a lot. Will not comment on performance because apparently its an old build.. They rely a lot on low fov and motion blur for that 'cinematic' feel and I always found that disingenuous and unpleasant. Things like annoying protagonist are nothing compared to what is packed with western games nowadays.

I couldn't care less about "controversies" around this shit but this game looks so on-rails in every trailer I see popping. Even Bioshit Infinite didn't look so linear, this looks Call of Duty campaign tier.
Maybe that's just because trailers but this doesn't look good at all right now.
The game was built around hub-like dungeons, and then it seems like they decided to slap an open world in between during development. The image based on pre-release material is bound to be misleading, its granted they'll show the most on-rail parts, since they're more cinematic and 'sell' the game better to average audience than seeing a guy solve some puzzle or loot and roam around. This game has a really cool looting animation btw. The guy just rips useful stuff from containers around with one telekinetic sweep. Its a nice workaround that removes some tedium without outright giving you all the loot without any input.
 

As an Amazon Associate, rpgcodex.net earns from qualifying purchases.
Back
Top Bottom