![]() ![]() Aegis, for nearly the entirety of the game, never does anything of her own will. That last point is stated but is not shown, and that’s a common thread in Steelrising. However, Aegis is different from other Automats in that, for reasons no one seems to understand but are painfully obvious very early on, she can speak and think for herself. The main character, Aegis, is an Automat (the shorthand used for automaton in this universe) who is charged with protecting Queen Marie Antoinette. The nugget of a good storyĮverything that interested me about Steelrising‘s plot and setting came from pre-release material describing the game rather than the game itself. Without that, uninspired gameplay and technical performance issues make this another uneven release for a studio that’s always sitting on the verge of success. The unfortunate reality, however, is that for every good idea Steelrising has on paper, nearly none of them are realized in the final product. I see potential in that premise, especially from a team whose prior games had little but the story to call great. We play as the lone intelligent automaton seeking to stop his rampage. It is set in 1789 in Paris during an alternate history where King Louis the XVI gained control over an army of automatons, quelling the revolution that would eventually lead to his execution in our world. ![]() It’s a Soulslike, but with perhaps the most interesting premises any of these imitators have had yet. This odd experiment feels almost intentionally left in the dark. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |