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Arkane PREY - Arkane's immersive coffee cup transformation sim - now with Mooncrash roguelike mode DLC

Siel

Arcane
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Joined
Aug 25, 2013
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906
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Some refined shithole
Unfortunately the game seems to have fallen in the trap of MAKE THINGS LOUD WHENEVER WE WANT THE PLAYERS ATTENTION. SURPRISE MOTHERFUCKER, you emotionally engaged yet? Like when you realize your apartment is a simulation and the loud music starts playing for no reason, or the random sound effect in the 20 minute mark when nothing even happens. And what's with the loud "objective complete" sound, totally takes you out of the game. And I haven't even watched further than that yet.

EDIT: Oh god the battle sounds :lol:, might as well play this whenever you get attacked


To be fair, unfitting sounds and music have been a thing in all shock games. :)
 

Hines

Savant
Joined
Jan 26, 2017
Messages
258
It's funny being a designer on this project banned on GAF. I see comments such as "unfortunately it's still not as complex as Ss2 (no research, complex maps/level design, player stats)," and think, eh, just wait...

I'll take you to your word, Arkane.
Is that Raf? I wonder why he'd be banned from there...

No it's Shawn Elliott some level designer.
Also Raf still posts (very occasionally) on TTLG.
He was a level designer on Bioshock: Infinite.

That's my biggest worry with Prey. Arkane used to spend years seeking out top talent. The team had to take a bunch of Battlecry devs, based in Austin, when it was cancelled. Since most of Prey's team were hired in the last couple of years, hopefully they sought out quality candidates rather than getting bums on seats.
 

abnaxus

Arcane
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10,889
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Fiernes
eePktzT.png
Jarlfrank is a Neofag?
 

Siel

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Aug 25, 2013
Messages
906
Location
Some refined shithole
So having watched enough footage, here is what I catched:

- Ambiant music and sound design sound good

- Graphically, it looks very sleek and sterile. I like it but it might be too cartoony for some people.

- There are 6 skill trees (3 are human type: hacking, weapons and engineer, 3 of "alien" type)

- Turrets can be hacked and you can transport them. They're friendly at first but the more you install alien mods, the more hostil they will be.

- You can't max everything with all the neuromods you find. Most likely 3 skill trees.

- Amno appear to be rare. I find it weird you can find some in mimic corpses (maybe because they can turn into weapons?).

- Genrally speaking I like how the looting makes sense here. At least compared to bioshock where people would put dollars in street trash cans.

- The Gloo canon can be used to bypasse areas or freeze small enemies temporally. You can also stick objets together. It can be interesting if you have points in "Leaverage" to throw it at enemies.

- On the map there are something like 10 levels. The Lobby looks like it's at the center (sounds like a HUB). You can reach other levels through the main lift, a zero-g conduit or the exterior thanks to airlocks.

- The inventory is pretty classic using slots (Deus Ex, System Shock).

- There is a quickloot system (a la Fallout 4), I hope you can disable it.

- Your weapon can break. Each weapon (and other items) have a blueprint. You can create it using the 3D Printer if you enough raw composants.

- These composants are created using a recycler and items from your invotory.

- You can upgrade weapons using an upgrade kit. (Firepower, Distance, Recoil, Loading speed).

- Your suit have an integrity status. If it's too low, you need to repair it with a "repair kit".

- You can add mods and perks on your scope and on your suit.

- Your scope will help you research for aliens strenght and weaknesses.

- There are status you need to cure. From what I've seen : Drunked, Fear, Burned, Suit Integrity, Radiations. Most likely others.
 

LESS T_T

Arcane
Joined
Oct 5, 2012
Messages
13,582
Codex 2014
Beth.net update: https://bethesda.net/en/article/10U...ngs-we-saw-and-did-in-prey-s-first-15-minutes

45 Things We Saw & Did in Prey’s First 15 Minutes

In Prey, every single thing in the game has a purpose and tells a story. With so much to see and do, one player may take a different path or use abilities and weapons in an entirely different way from another. That’s OK, though – embracing Arkane Studios’ signature freedom of choice, Prey is meant to be experienced differently by different players. We recently handed the controls over to press around the world for the very first time and set them loose with the first hour of the game. (You can see some of their initial impressions here.) We also played through the beginning of Prey quite a lot, with the goal of uncovering as many details as we could. Here are 45 things we saw and did in just the first 15 minutes of the game.

SPOILER WARNING

MORGAN’S APARTMENT

1. Who Is Your Morgan?
  • Before we began the game, we had to choose whether we’d be the male or female version of Morgan Yu. For this demo, we chose female Morgan.
2. Good Morning, Morgan
  • It’s Monday, March 15, 2032, and we’re in a ritzy apartment with an absolutely breathtaking view of a shining bayside metropolis. In the distance we can see the towering golden TranStar building, where Morgan will be starting her new job, working with her brother Alex. We don’t know much about Morgan yet, but she’s almost certainly very well-off, just based on the luxury around her.
3. Hands On
  • Near the bed is a workspace covered in a tinkerer’s clutter. It’s safe to assume Morgan is both brilliant and fond of working with her hands.
4. The Yu Family
  • Signs of Morgan’s life and family are littered around the apartment. A note from Alex congratulating her on her first day on the job. An email, also from Alex, explains that their parents won’t be able to be at the shuttle to see Morgan off because they’ll be in New York for “company stuff.” An austere family photo showing the Yu siblings and their parents. A framed newspaper clipping featuring Alex and Morgan is hanging on the wall by the bathroom. A magazine interview with Alex about TranStar’s work with something called Neuromods. In the interview, Alex claims these scientific revelations could turn someone into a mathematician of Einstein’s level in a matter of minutes.
5. A Painful Procedure
  • Next to Morgan’s bed is a document outlining the steps for Neuromod installation. Sticking a needle in our eye for five minutes doesn’t sound like our idea of a good time.

Prey_Neuromod_730x411.png


6. Morgan the Gamer
  • Everyone needs to take a minute to unwind every now and then. Just from glancing around Morgan’s apartment, it looks like she chooses to relax with videogames. A controller sits on the coffee table and a copy of Galactic Conquistadors IX rests on a shelf next to the couch.
7. Out of Place
  • There are strange skid marks on the floor of Morgan’s apartment and in the hallway outside her door. It looks as though something heavy was dragged across the ground, perhaps repeatedly.
8. First Day on the Job
  • Morgan is headed for the Talos I research facility in space, but before she can hop on a shuttle, she’ll need to meet with Alex and undergo a series of tests “to prepare you for a life in orbit,” or so an email on her computer says. There’s a helicopter waiting for her on the roof of her apartment building, but she’ll need to don her new TranStar uniform first.

Prey_SuitUp_730x411.gif


9. “I can’t talk to you anymore.”
  • Chatting with Patricia Varma in the hallway outside of Morgan’s apartment is an odd experience. What starts as a polite morning chat turns into a desperate attempt to get rid of Morgan after a few minutes pressing Ms. Varma for conversation. A pleasant “There’s a chopper on the roof for you” becomes a fearful, whispered “I can’t talk to you anymore” before she stops acknowledging Morgan’s presence altogether.
10. Get to the Chopper
  • There are even more of those strange skid marks on the way to the helicopter.
11. No Show
  • Yes, you can jump into the helicopter blades and die, and yes, you do get a secret achievement for it.
12. Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous
  • The helicopter isn’t a normal helicopter. It’s sleek and luxurious, with wide windows to allow for unobstructed views of the city and the beautiful bay.

TRANSTAR

13. Hello Operator
  • An Operator is the first thing to greet us once we hop off the helicopter and enter the building. This one is Science Operator, though different Operators will have different purposes and functions.
14. Ok, What’s Going on Here?
  • More dark drag marks line the floor inside the TranStar office. What is being moved?
15. Father’s Words of Wisdom
  • A plaque in the TranStar office has a quote from William Yu, Morgan and Alex’s father. It reads “The last frontier is the human mind and we are its pioneers.”
16. Big Brother
  • Of course your big brother would be there to greet you on your first day of work. He seems overall pretty confident that Morgan will pass her tests with flying colors and promises: “We’ll be in orbit next week.”
17. Younger Sibling
  • We’ve got our older brother standing right there, so we have to mess with him, right? We started chucking a nearby flower pot at him repeatedly just to see how he would react. In typical big bother fashion we got a very frustrated “Why?” and “Would you stop that?” Fine, we’ll stop. For now.
18. Something Isn’t Right
  • The tests are being run by a doctor named Sylvain Bellamy, and he seems concerned by the results as you progress. He gets progressively more irritated with every one we complete.
19. Keep Your Eye on the Prize
  • After three physical tests, we’re led to a computer to complete a personality test. Rather than focusing on the screen like a good student, we keep an eye on Dr. Bellamy as he asks someone to fill his coffee cup, and we notice something very strange. As he’s talking to us, a black blur sweeps up onto the desk in front of him and suddenly there are…. two coffee cups in front of him. As he grabs the new addition, a horrifying creature latches itself onto his face and all hell breaks loose. Gas leaks into the testing room Morgan is in and she slips into unconsciousness.

Prey_TestingRoom_730x411.png


BACK IN MORGAN’S APARTMENT

20. Good Morning, Morgan
  • It’s Monday, March 15, 2032, and we’re in a ritzy apartment with an absolutely breathtaking view of a shining bayside metropolis. Wait… That can’t possibly be right. Yesterday was March 15, 2032, wasn’t it?
21. A Warning from a Friend
  • Everything in the apartment is exactly where it was yesterday morning, as though someone came in and reset everything we previously moved around. Walking over to Morgan’s computer, we find it full of messages from someone named January warning us to get out the apartment.
22. A Very Different Kind of Morning
  • We slip into our TranStar uniform and head out of the apartment, only to be met by a horrifying scene. Patricia Varma – the woman we spoke with yesterday morning – is now a corpse on the floor, resting exactly where she was the last time we saw her. She hardly looks human anymore; her skin is grey and swollen, and a look of horror is stuck on her frozen face.
23. Take Arms
  • We approach to examine Varma’s body and grab the wrench at her side, just in case whatever got her comes after us next.

Prey_TheWrench_730x411.png


24. Enter January
  • The same January that sent us those desperate emails is now calling us on our TranScribe (a personal data device given to all TranStar employees) to tell us we’re not safe. Following her instructions, we head back out into the hallway to see if we can find a way out. However, the path we took last time is blocked. A wall seems to have slid into place, closing off our exit.
25. Puzzle Solved
  • Well that certainly explains all those dark marks we were noticing on the ground. The walls seem to be capable of rearranging themselves to form new structures.
26. Mind the Glass
  • With our primary way out blocked off, we’ll need to improvise. We head to our back door to see if the balcony will offer any solutions. The door is still jammed, but desperate times call for desperate measures, and we smash the glass door open with our wrench. Doing so reveals there was never any magnificent cityscape at all, it was just an image being played on special glass to give the appearance of a high rise apartment view. (We could have also broken through the fish tank in the hallway and gotten out that way.)

Prey_BrokenGlass_730x411.png


SIMULATION LAB
27. Just a Rat in a Cage
  • Instead of stepping out onto a balcony, the glass shatters to reveal a lab. Littered around the space are all the items we’ve seen in Morgan’s apartment, which means someone probably did go into the apartment at night and reset everything we took or moved, just as we suspected.
28. We’ll Be Monitoring Your Progress
  • A chart at a computer in the lab shows a log of Morgan’s morning activities, though the date reads February 22, 2035, not March 15, 2032.
29. Handy Dandy Post-It Notes
  • There’s a yellow sticky note near the computer with the owner’s password jotted down. Keep an eye out for other notes like this. You’ll need them to access people’s personal files and unlock certain doors if you haven’t invested in your Hacking skill.
30. Brother Dearest
  • The computer on the desk has a recording from Alex. It’s the same exact message we heard the morning before when he called Morgan to congratulate her on her first day. If that was a recording, does Alex know about Morgan being monitored and studied?

Prey_Alex_730x411.png


31. Attack!
  • As we push on through the eerie, empty labs, a pizza box we pass by suddenly leaps into action just like Dr. Bellamy’s coffee cup did. We swing wildly with our wrench until the creature is a mess of goo on the ground. We’ll need to be on the lookout for duplicate items in our environment from now on.
32. That Bird Is Grounded
  • We make it to the area that should have been the roof where the helicopter was, but now it’s just a dimly lit, half-assembled version of itself. There is no skyline. The chopper sits stationary in a large glass room. The glass looks just like the windows in Morgan’s apartment, which means it’s safe to say we never took any trips in this beautiful bird. It was all faked. On the other side of the room is the door to the TranStar building rooftop access.
33. Was Any of It Real?
  • Stepping into what we had previously believed to be the TranStar building, we see a mocked up office setting in a state of disrepair. Sparks fly from the elevator, bits of the floor are rising and falling in jerky motions, as though trying to follow a track and meeting resistance. Whatever was causing the rooms to reset themselves is glitching out. Entering the elevator to get back to the testing area we were in before proves our theory correct. The door does not shut, though the sound of floors whirring by filters through speakers. We watch as the entire room shifts around to create the space where we met up with Alex the day before.
34. Ever Feel like You’re Being Watched?
  • The testing rooms are locked, but the security booth we passed by yesterday is now open, and passing through allows us to see life from Bellamy’s side of the glass. The lab is dark and mostly silent as we poke through the scientist’s belongings. It’s only when we step past one of the testing rooms that we are startled out of our cautious search. An alien that had previously been disguised as a chair throws itself at the glass and breaks through.
35. Meet the Mimic
  • After we’ve taken care of the alien, January’s calls us on the TranScribe once more to tell us that we just encountered a Mimic, and it does exactly what the name implies.
36. Stay On Your Toes
  • Fighting with a Mimic means keeping your head on a swivel. These nimble little aliens will leap and slide all around a space to get a better angle on you. They can stretch their bodies out to hit you from a distance, and they can retreat to take on a different form if the fight isn’t going their way. They will also travel in packs if they can, and you do not want to get surrounded by them.
37. Divide and Conquer
  • Heading back to our original path we make it to a decontamination room before hitting what appears to be office space. As we wait for the decontamination process to complete, a terrified TranStar employee throws himself at the glass in front of us, only to be quickly taken down by a Mimic and turned into a husk like Patricia Varma. As we watch, the Mimic that killed him splits into four separate entities and all four race off to hide in different locations. January calls us again to tell us this is how they were able to take over the station so quickly. Once they started multiplying no one could stop them.
38. Violation of Privacy
  • Searching through people’s computers will provide a wealth of information. You might find codes to safes or doors, you might get a new side objective to complete, you might learn more about the situation on Talos I and the brewing suspicions among the TranStar employees. It pays to be a snoop in Prey. In one email we learn that every day, Morgan’s memories are reset back to March 15, 2032 – the day we believed it was when the game started.
39. Not So Little
  • Where the Mimics are small and mostly pretty easily managed (unless a group of them catch you by surprise), the Phantoms are much larger and more humanoid, and certainly not to be taken lightly. We get our first look at these towering aliens when we exit the Simulation Lab and head into the Neuromod Division. We see it directly in front of us, standing behind a window. It’s only there for a moment before it blinks away and vanishes from sight, but a glimpse was all we needed to see that it wasn’t something we want to tangle with at this point.
40. I’m Rubber, You’re GLOO
  • We round the corner into the Neuromod Division central lobby and find a corpse on the ground surrounded by strange hardened blobs. Sitting at the body’s side is our first real gadget (sorry, wrench, you don’t count): the GLOO Cannon. A stack of GLOO canisters are piled near the weapon and one more can be found by climbing up the tipped over tower next to the Security Booth and searching the corpse of the TranStar Employee who thought they would be safe by getting to higher ground.

Prey_ReleaseDate_Mimics_730x411.png


41. Swarmed!
  • GLOO Cannon in hand, we don’t make it more than a few feet before a swarm of Mimics rush through the area. Some try to fight immediately, some try to hide and wait for a better opportunity to strike. We make use of the GLOO Cannon to freeze them in place and shatter them with the wrench.
42. Powered Up
  • On the far end of the Neuromod Division atrium is a glass case containing our very first Neuromod. There are a few things we could do with this right now. We could use it to upgrade our Hacking skill, allowing us to get into the Security Booth. We could put that Neuromod into our Leverage skill and clear the path to a blocked off bathroom in the atrium. Or we could start working on our Repair ability to fix the grav lift that will take us up to the second floor. We opt for the Hacking ability and pick up a weapon upgrade kit and a map of the area in the Security Booth. (Had we gone with Leverage we would have found another dead TranStar employee and a medkit in the men’s restroom.)
43. Always Another Way
  • Since we didn’t choose to invest in repair, we can’t get the grav lift working to take us upstairs. But in Prey, there’s always another option. We take our handy new GLOO Cannon and build our own ramp up to the second floor, where we find another new toy: the Disruptor Stun Gun, which will be handy against any enemy turrets or rogue Operator bots we run into.
44. Arm Yourself
  • The GLOO Cannon and the Disruptor Stun Gun are great tools to have, but for some enemies we might want something a little more heavy duty. Lucky for us, there’s a shotgun lying next to the body of another unfortunate employee. Hopefully it will serve us better than it did him.
45. Not in Kansas Anymore
  • Just a few steps past where we found the shotgun and we get our first real glimpse at where we are, and it definitely isn’t a research facility located in the heart of a thriving metropolis. This is the Talos I space station, and that means we’re trapped up here with the alien threat and no real means of escape. From here, we’ll need to listen to January, keep our wits about us and just try to stay alive.
Prey_BrokenGlass_730x411.png

And a round-up of previews: https://bethesda.net/en/article/5E0Y2FNMv6g8oKEsuOAWUW/prey-impressions
 

Gerrard

Arcane
Joined
Nov 5, 2007
Messages
12,871
Polish site CD-Action posted PC requirements. I don't know what is the source of this information because i could not find anything in the English Internet, but whatever.

Minimal:
  • Windows 7 (64-bit) or newer
  • Core i5-2400 3,1 GHz or MD FX-8320
  • GeForce GTX 670 2 GB or Radeon HD 7870 2 GB
  • RAM: 8 GB
  • Drive space: 55 GB
Recommended:
  • Windows 7 (64-bit) or newer
  • Core i7-3770 4-Core 3,4 GHz or AMD FX-8350
  • GeForce GTX 970 4 GB or Radeon R9 290 4 GB
  • RAM: 8 GB
  • Drive space: 55 GB
In before 30GB of uncompressed audio.
 

EnthalpyFlow

Scholar
Patron
Joined
Feb 9, 2017
Messages
251
Location
A Galiza
Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire
People tagging shit and WTF am I reading? on the Wolfenstein recommendation should be purged and are all that is wrong in the world.
I'm super cereal.
 

Ash

Arcane
Joined
Oct 16, 2015
Messages
7,055
W:TNO was mediocre. Even Wolfenstien 2009 was far better.

On topic: Prey is perhaps shaping up to be better than Bioschlock, at least...not that that is difficult to accomplish.
 

Ash

Arcane
Joined
Oct 16, 2015
Messages
7,055
It was generic as shit, but guess what, it actually had level design, some semblance of non-linear gameplay, and didn't constantly shove banal boring control-robbing scripted scenes in your face, all the while claiming to be a return of the old school. Also no fetch uests and random "infiltration" missions and turret segments out of the blue that suck ass. Also didn't constantly rob your guns. The notoriously bad stealth missions in RTCW were better than those in W:TNO, even.

Underneath all the shit of W:TNO (70% of it) there was a good shooter. Even a somewhat interesting story. But get gameplay right first for goodness sake, you're supposed to be making a fucking game.
Moon mission was utterly boring too. So much potential wasted.
 
Last edited:

Ash

Arcane
Joined
Oct 16, 2015
Messages
7,055
Oh sure, blame it on the testers and not the pandering developers.
Lets not forget the masses can handle oh so complex and mind boggling skill/perk trees in Skyrim.

But hey, it could just be a legitimate design choice to focus less on skill trees, but I doubt it. It's probably just pandering and accessible design, same as Arkane have been doing for years, same as Bethesda and subsidiaries have been doing for years.
 

Siel

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Aug 25, 2013
Messages
906
Location
Some refined shithole
But hey, it could just be a legitimate design choice to focus less on skill trees, but it's probably just pandering.

Looks more like they removed this trauma entirely from what I've seen.
 

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