- May 19, 2011
- 19,775
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My wife wanted me to try this game (she likes watching me play video games), and while my initial impression through watching online videos (basic non-spoiler gameplay, reviews), was like a modern platform game (my gaming roots are from the Amiga, Philips G7000, Colecovision), I wasn't all that enthusiastic (I've tried playing those old games and they don't compare with more complex save-driven games IMO), but gave it a try.
I'm really impressed with it, I haven't played a game like this full stop. At a glance it's like a 'three lives' kind of game that people of my age will have grown up with, and when you've lost all your lives you start over (you're attempting to escape the Underworld), and you mostly lose anything you've gained in that attempt except some basic building block elements that incrementally make you stronger, different weapons you can change over to as you defeat end-level bosses, and - at least IMO - an extremely well-balanced system of ensuring you don't get overpowered while giving you enough to go on and making it a struggle as you go. Each escape is different, you can't just pick up the same per-escape upgrades, enemy tactics are different and sometimes are upgraded at key intervals.
Some games have a "now you've completed the game once, you can try again with some modified mechanics" element which TBH has never really lured me in to another immediate game completion. This game has that to an insane degree but the plot also revolves nicely around it, with optional character development and ways you can choose to make the game harder and give extra rewards.
I think I'm up to my fourth or fifth successful escape (out of something like 50 total attempts) and it's still got me hooked. Judging by YouTube videos I've barely scraped the surface of it.
You can buy the soundtrack (provided as FLAC and MP3) cheaply with the game purchase on Steam, check it out on say YouTube and see if it's your cup of tea.
PS: it does have an auto-save system in-built so you can quit after clearing a chamber, which normally is about one every few minutes.
I'm really impressed with it, I haven't played a game like this full stop. At a glance it's like a 'three lives' kind of game that people of my age will have grown up with, and when you've lost all your lives you start over (you're attempting to escape the Underworld), and you mostly lose anything you've gained in that attempt except some basic building block elements that incrementally make you stronger, different weapons you can change over to as you defeat end-level bosses, and - at least IMO - an extremely well-balanced system of ensuring you don't get overpowered while giving you enough to go on and making it a struggle as you go. Each escape is different, you can't just pick up the same per-escape upgrades, enemy tactics are different and sometimes are upgraded at key intervals.
Some games have a "now you've completed the game once, you can try again with some modified mechanics" element which TBH has never really lured me in to another immediate game completion. This game has that to an insane degree but the plot also revolves nicely around it, with optional character development and ways you can choose to make the game harder and give extra rewards.
I think I'm up to my fourth or fifth successful escape (out of something like 50 total attempts) and it's still got me hooked. Judging by YouTube videos I've barely scraped the surface of it.
You can buy the soundtrack (provided as FLAC and MP3) cheaply with the game purchase on Steam, check it out on say YouTube and see if it's your cup of tea.
PS: it does have an auto-save system in-built so you can quit after clearing a chamber, which normally is about one every few minutes.
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