Wednesday, January 30, 2013

The Dead Space 3 demo

I know I'm a bit late to the game but I finally got a chance to play the Dead Space 3 demo on Xbox.  Most of this post is going to be mentions of things I noticed while playing.  Some items will be discussed at more detail, but not all.



The first thing I notice is the interesting change in menu style.  Previous Dead Space installments used a menu style evocative of a RIG-style computer interface with a nebulous background of shifting tones and shapes.  3's menu panels are on large cross-sectional slices of what appears to be a necromorph or some other organic thing frozen in a block of ice.  I suppose if I were trying to read into it I'd draw a parallel between the more concrete and grounded menu system with the terrestrial basis of the game.  Dead Space 1 was entirely in space except for the last level and so far Dead Space 2 has been all in space as well (You can follow that playthrough on youtube).  Either way, it's got a lot of motion and is very cool to watch although I can see possibly being annoyed at the length of some of the animations.

Immediately after the menus I noticed the focus on music.  The previous Dead Space installments used music as a background element, and they were very effective with it.  The menu is subtle and unnerving but very much ambient, it's tense in the battle scenes and generally serves purpose...but I couldn't hum you the Dead Space theme.  This new game puts the music front and center with a discernible theme in the menu, however it sounds like a poor man's Batman theme (Nolan era films, possibly including Arkham games).  Not that it's bad since it's a great theme and other recent movie themes have lifted from it somewhat and it's possible it lifted its inspiration from something I can't recall, it's just very reminiscent and I couldn't stop noticing it.

Onto the actual gameplay, the game begins with Isaac pulling a Luke in the Wampa cave.  Apparently he somehow ended up upside down when his ship crashed following Dead Space 2.  Isaac is either the unluckiest or the LUCKIEST S.O.B. ever.  He keeps running into these Necromorph outbreaks and somehow surviving them.  Deciding he's the unluckiest, he assumes that if he survived everyone else is probably safe and begins to look for them.

I don't know that I can take full credit for this as I already saw Chris of gamertagged notice that Isaac shields his face with his hand while wearing his face-shielding helmet in the snow storm.

The early game in general is a lot more linear that previous installments, I barely felt like activating the beacon.  The outdoor texture is quite well done and they have an interesting looking snow effect for when you're walking, though I do hope they make it look less lumpy for the final release.  The footprints look good.  It's a nice way to conceal the borders of the level, but I think in some spots they go overboard.  There are a few spots where you can see the path really well, then take a few steps forward and now the snow is everywhere and you can't see more than 3 feet.  It's not time based because it doesn't go away until you back up.

The physics system for loose objects on the ground has been upgraded, though still seems a little rough.  This game involves the standard "Isaac stomp all boxes on the ground to receive goodies" mechanic, but the boxes are a bit more jiggly than they used to be.  Stomping can sometimes just move the box.  Also, the engine is so picky that when Isaac raises his foot to do said stomp, it can result in kicking the box like a soccer ball.  At one point Isaac just straight up punted a box off the side of a cliff because of this.  It was actually really funny.

The quicktime events the game uses are interesting.  I had to do the opening one where you climb through the falling vehicle cab 3 times because I was having a hard time figuring out if the panicked and flashing buttons meant to tap, hold, or spam.  The arrow for which direction to push the joy stick is hard to pick out until you realize what it means and the constant flashing is confusing.  It turns out you HOLD the joystick even though it's flashing and spam the buttons because it's flashing.

The snowy terrain leads to some interesting potential where enemies literally pop up through the snow, but since this is Dead Space I have the sense they're going to beat the gimmick like a red headed step-child.  The enemies are more charred looking and smaller than enemies in previous Dead Space games.  They're all wearing snowsuits and from what I remember don't have many extra limbs.  Some enemies will break in half causing 3 huge tentacles to spew from their waist.  I'm not sure if this is because of a specific kill type or enemy type since there's a lot less differentiation...or the demo primary included this enemy type with a few variations.  There are also pure human enemies due to the planet magically being a Unitology stronghold or something.  There are some humans who are neutral to you and another faction that wants you dead.  Also the necromorphs.

Initially the game invited a lot of comparison to John Carpenter's The Thing, and I kindof wanted to think it too, especially when I first ran into the co-op character but I can't see it happening.  The Thing is all about slow tension and paranoia, a sense of isolation.  With as much action as the series involves at this point I don't think they could pull it off.  First off, Carver is the other player character.  They simply couldn't have the character betray Isaac or be implied to be an enemy which removes the paranoia that could result from not knowing if your friend was really on your side.  Sure they can do this with some of the other characters, but we're kindof used to that twist by this point in the series...it's happened in every game so far.  Also, there are so many necromorphs, and random human allies and enemies that show up and fight you or shout and die by a scripted event that I don't feel isolated at all as Isaac.  I feel like Doomguy.  It's finally gotten to the point where I am no longer even pretending to  cautiously move down a hallway.  I am Isaac-Fucking-Clarke with advanced degrees in engineering YOUR ASS TO BE KICKED!!!!!!RAAARGH!!!!1oneshift

I'll still have to decide if the game is worth buying initially.  I kindof want to play it on Let's Drink to Gaming, but I don't know if it's worth it.  EA's doing a lot of stupid stuff around the game that I don't want to support so I may wait a few months until it goes on sale.  Another option would be buying it and immediately marathoning the whole thing in a single sitting live on twitch.tv.  That's sort of outlandish and would probably take 12 hours or more given the times on howlongtobeat.com for Dead Space 1 and 2.  Maybe I'll ask twitter to see if there's interest in it.

Anyway, that's what I thought of while playing the demo.  Take from it what you will.

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