Boggles my mind that they didnt announce this next to the PS5 Pro.

Mind you im not interested in picking up a PS5 or a Pro but I miiight check this out when it comes to PC in 2-3 years.

  • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    It’s the ubi-soft model of go to point of interest and do thing but one a gameplay, design, aesthetic, and story level it’s much, much better than ubisoft’s games.

    The gameplay is rock solid. Swordfighting is incredibly satisfying. There’s no “press a to win” stuff like ass creed. You have to actively parry, use your tools, counter specific enemy styles, and fight smart. There are no i-frames at all - any attack animation that touches your characters hurtbox will damage you. The difficutly goes from forgiving all the way up to “lethal” where you and the enemies die in a few cuts.

    Design wise there’s plenty to do. The pois - traversal puzzles, enemy camps, playing flute for cats, composing haiku, have good variety.

    Aesthetically it’s gorgeous. The game goes for a hyper-realism where the game world reflects the narrative - betrayals happen in dim, misty swamps, huge fields of vibrantly colored flowers denote areas of special interest. The game has has important diegetic, like actually part of the game world, ui. Instead of a quest marker the wind blows you towards your destination. Literally winds of fate. When you approach a poi a mystical golden bird will appear and chirp to gain your attention then lead you to the poi. When you’re not fighting there’s generally no ui on your screen so you don’t get the ubi thing where your screen is covered in different icons.

    Story wise the game builds a character arc for your dude as he starts off as a stereotypical honor bound warrior dude and grows to become an insurgent leader. There’s a good assorted cast of characters who represent people from across the social strata. I did have an issue with the story presenting an overly rosy view of samurai, but then the dlc expansion specifically addresses that and examines it.

    Two things I really like

    • when you complete a poi the game will reveal a few nearby undiscovered pois. This lets you just bumble across the map from adventure to adventure organically instead of climbing a tower and knowing where everything is

    • the game gives you most of your core toys and abilities by the end of act I so you can make use of them for most of the game. You continue to amass tools and abilities throughout the game, but progression is front-loaded so you don’t end up in a situation where you only get to play with the cool stuff at the very end.

    It’s also got drip for days and no mtx, just the one expansion pack that adds, idk, 10-20 hours of stuff to do (and really powers up your bow skills if you want to be archer guy)

    • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.netM
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      2 months ago

      Agreed all around. I think it’s a great game. I love the direction here to go different era, location, and protagonist. We’re in pre-settlement Ezo/Hokkaido, so in theory most people you’re dealing with should be non-Japanese Ainu when they were easily powerful enough to maintain rough parity with the Japanese. Settler-colonialism here wouldn’t kick off for more than 200 years. If SP delivers on this, it would be amazing.

      • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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        2 months ago

        Agreed, it’d be really cool to see Ainu people centered at a time when they weren’t under the boot of the Japanese state.

        Is it widely known that Japan colonized Ezo/Hokkaido and the kingdom of Ryukyu/Okinawa? And maybe a few other places prior to Imperial Japan’s imperialist phase?

        • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.netM
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          2 months ago

          I mean everyone understands that Japan’s dominion over those territories is relatively recent. Anything more than that, I have no idea.

          I haven’t watched the trailer so I dunno, but I think Atsu is an Ainu name, so I’m optimistic for that.

    • LaGG_3 [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      2 months ago
      mild spoiler regarding a costume

      the game gives you most of your core toys and abilities by the end of act I so you can make use of them for most of the game. You continue to amass tools and abilities throughout the game, but progression is front-loaded so you don’t end up in a situation where you only get to play with the cool stuff at the very end.

      I was super surprised that you don’t get the costume from all the promo art until pretty late in the game lol

        • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          2 months ago

          That was what the final stretch of Zelda TotK was like for me. Defeating Ganon took a back seat to sleuthing and dungeon diving to finish out my outfit.

        • LaGG_3 [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          2 months ago

          Yeah, fantastic dress up potential in that game. I’d be constantly swapping outfits for towns/exploring/different kinds of missions.

          I also particularly enjoyed seeing all the indigo-dyed fabric drying in one of the late game towns.