Lord_Potato
Arcane
Did any of you guys played it?
It's quite a fun tactical RPG about a band of space criminals sent to a privately owned prison planet and forced to fight each other for the enjoyment of the masses - their combats are being broadcasted by a galactic TV network. The story is very barebones and reminiscent of the 1987 action movie "The Running Man" with Arnold Schwarzenegger, the aesthetics and general vibe is also that of the 80s, while the gameplay is old school 90s tactics. Somewhat between (much simplified) Ufo: Enemy Unknown and Jagged Alliance 2.
You start with one predefined character, but quickly build a team of local misfits. Some will join you for free, others for cash. Your squad, from which you will deploy from 2 up to 4 soldiers for each mission, will be supported by a scientist developing new drugs and mutagens, and a technician building cyber implants, bionic body parts, and upgrading gear. But before they start working for you, first you must find and liberate them! These are just 2 of more than two dozen missions that form the single-player campaign (with a bit of branching and non-linearity). There is also multi-player mode in which two players can wage battles with teams numbering up to 6 troops.
The meat of the game is of course tactical, turn-based combat in various isometric locations, representing dilapidated towns, shady bars, secret laboratories, gloomy caverns, and mysterious excavation sites. All the typical elements: action points, line of sight, a chance to hit, different modes of shooting, kneeling for better aim, using cover, and interacting with the environment are implemented here and together create some pretty challenging combat encounters. Fortunately, if the next mission is too tough, you can grind a bit in special arenas, where your squad defend against waves of enemies or competes with another team controlled by AI. Missions are varied: sometimes the aim is to rescue a hostage, protect your base, gather resources, capture a strong point or simply kill all enemies on the map. They can also be completed as many times as you want so true perfectionists may try to get their perfect run of every encounter. The only weak part of these encounters is a limited selection of enemies: your team (guys in blue) will always fight other criminals (guys in red), mutants (green) or cyborgs (grey). While you sometimes find carcasses of enormous monsters than once inhabited the prison planet, you never have the opportunity to fight them, which IMO is a missed opportunity.
As the title suggests, Bionic Battle Mutants provide many tools to develop your squad. Soldiers gather experience, and upon gaining levels their primary statistics can be improved and additional skills selected. But they can also be mutated (different types of tiered mutagens add additional bonuses, like health point regeneration) and enhanced with cyber implants. In the course of battles, they may lose limbs, but these may be regrown with the use of proper chemicals. Even dead characters can be brought back to life with the right artifacts. All these modifications not only change their fighting capabilities but also influence their looks, sometimes in a quite dramatic manner.
Apart from mutagens and bionic body parts soldiers also use their gear. There's not much of it - 4 basic types of weapons (pistols, shotguns, sniper rifles, machine guns), 3 types of armor (light, medium and heavy), but they can all be altered with a wide selection of mods. Each soldier can also be equipped with different types of combat drugs (offering additional action points, armor class or regenerating health) and grenades (frag, smoke, teargas, poison).
All in all, it's a somewhat limited, but enjoyable experience. Unapologetically old-school, sometimes quite challenging, with a great atmosphere and nice pixel-art visuals. The game does not overstay its welcome (full single-player campaign with some grinding took me around 9 hours) but it's also cheap and often on sale on Steam. I may recommend it to fans of tactical RPGs, just don't expect another Jagged Alliance 2. It's much less ambitious, but still offers good fun.
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