I’m most likely gonna continue with Split Fiction, and try Aliens: Dark Descent and continue with Sea of Stars, now that I got a complimentary Game Pass subscription for a bit.
SF is still… mostly cinematic. The gameplay still feels generally basic, like a dash of Zelda-like puzzle.
However, if you appreciate incredible camera work and design, it continues to thrill with awesome interactions that ITT pioneered, such as
the Parking Attendant; one player entering and the other coordinating with the havoc the interior player wreaks is just awesome. The flying-car sequences looked like they could have been straight out of a movie (both navigating across multiple ones and riding in one).
I have reservations about SF’s too-corny/tropey dialogue, but hopefully it’ll improve as we dig into Mio’s past.
I’m most likely gonna continue with Split Fiction, and try Aliens: Dark Descent and continue with Sea of Stars, now that I got a complimentary Game Pass subscription for a bit.
SF is still… mostly cinematic. The gameplay still feels generally basic, like a dash of Zelda-like puzzle.
However, if you appreciate incredible camera work and design, it continues to thrill with awesome interactions that ITT pioneered, such as
the Parking Attendant; one player entering and the other coordinating with the havoc the interior player wreaks is just awesome. The flying-car sequences looked like they could have been straight out of a movie (both navigating across multiple ones and riding in one).
I have reservations about SF’s too-corny/tropey dialogue, but hopefully it’ll improve as we dig into Mio’s past.