Monday, November 24, 2008

Purity and Faith

If we lived in a bizarre universe where reviewers measured the "value" of a game by its immersiveness, Fallout 3 would slay armies of lesser games and crunch the backs of most FPS's in 'twain.

Upon completing the game, I found a sort of warm comfort when the credits rolled and my quest was complete, freeing me of my virtual imprisonment. Shortly there after the warmth of success chilled to a void of loneliness. No game lasts forever, but Fallout really felt like it could. The main campaign inevitably felt shallow and short, an epic ultimately unfulfilled. Last night I picked it up again, determined to harvest the remnants of hope from the other 50% of the Wasteland I left unexplored. Surprisingly this was not disappointing. With the main quest put aside the gameplay was still very enjoyable. I believe this is because at its heart Fallout is about the Wasteland and not a single quest. The true experience is this crossroads of destruction and insanity and the inhabitants who hold on by a few crooked fingers. Good deeds to be done and bad ones to execute were still abound and Three Dog even sings of them (if you choose to listen). I believe this game will not go quietly into the night and with DLC promised, that can almost be guaranteed.

I will now compare playing the Mirror's Edge demo to eating a powdered, vanilla-creme donut. Your first bite is stale bread and powder up your nose when the unimaginative tutorial starts. Limited paths and move execution to continue? Tsk, tsk, tsk. In a game aiming to break new ground, this was incredibly rudimentary and boring. Then you bite into a small nip of creme after doing your first jump. The realistic vaults and rolls tease your tingling taste buds as you are still forced upon a rigid path. THEN CHOMP! You complete the tutorial to find the soft sugary payload of creme filling called the first free-running mission. This was incredibly fun and thrilling with the only exception being a limited environment in which to run. Although you quickly find yourself crunching on your fingers as the demo concludes with an invigorating chase. Like every good donut.. err.. game demo, you can only imagine what the rest is like. Until then.... Portal 1.5: Mirror's Edge!

And if you didn't shoot Celeste, you aren't a real gamer =P

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