It’s a tiny point, however this empowerment truly transformed the tone of the pair approximately hrs I played. As you would certainly anticipate from a game so motivated by Dead Space, this definitely plays right into that collection’ difficult sci-fi area zombies wheelhouse. Again, this occurs in a really practical area setting, this time around a jail on Callisto, a moon around Jupiter, that’s been overwhelmed by an odd altering unusual infection called the Biophage. The straight outcome is a really zombie-meets-Alien mashup, as you battle contaminated detainees as well as browse a greatly commercial terminal congested with slimed, body-studded biography issue dirtied wall surfaces.
Don’t touch that
Much of the tale is greatly safeguarded right now, with a lot of my inquiries to Schofield dispersed for not providing anything away. “I can’t tell you what ‘the protocol’ is, because that’s what the whole thing is about,” he says, adding, “there’s a deep story, a spin in the long run” to at least give me something. What we do know is that the hero, Jacob Lee, is a prisoner fighting to survive this prison full of monsters and mutations. What that involved in my time playing saw me fighting to reach a water processing plant, so that I could purge a water tank and use the pipes to reach the oxygen processing part of the station.
This all played out in a very action-heavy take on horror, creeping through slimey tunnels and grimy, utilitarian corridors. I mentioned hard sci-fi before and much of that comes through the heavy plating and pipes that give everything a submarine or oil rig feel. I could almost feel the oily grit of the metal surfaces. Nothing here is made to look pretty, it’s made to do its job: keeping space out. Digging further into this functional aspect of hard sci-fi, I seemed to spend quite a bit of time wading through space poop. The sewage processing needs of a remote moon base apparently requires an impressive amount of easily traversable vats when you’re trying to use water treatment as a shortcut. If you’ve ever watched The Expanse, this feels like very much at the ‘Belter’ end of the spectrum (and if you haven’t, Belters are basically the lowest rung of humans in space, living in the filth of the machinery that makes it all possible).
Through all of this there’s still the obvious constant threat of alien zombie attack. While I focused on that melee combat to open, there are a lot of options that all feel good. I only had a pistol in the section I played but it’s an absolute handcannon, with thunderous blasts rippling the air with shockwaves. Ammo treads a really nice balance between having plenty one minute and running out suddenly and without warning. You might use a few blasts to kneecap one opponent to buy time for a few direct baton blows on another, for example. I also quite often shot the legs out of an alien to then run up for a finishing blow while they were on the ground.
Get a GRP
Then there’s the GRP, or ‘grip’, which lets you use a telekinetic power (like Dead Space’s Kinesis) to grab enemies, either using them as shields or hurling them around. It’s surprisingly powerful, letting you pick up an enemy straight away, no need to damage them or get them in a ‘pick up able’ state. On more than one occasion I just grabbed and fired a monster over a handrail into the abyss below, ending a potential fight in seconds. Combat essentially boils down to managing the threats around you, using all these tools to stay ahead and creating a tense, pressured balance between tactics and panic.
As I played, I noticed a few really interesting passing tonal changes that I loved, including a flooded-to-waist-height chamber, washed out completely in water rippled red light from the bloody biomatter growing over the walls. Or a corridor battle set against a far door’s blindingly lit opening, reducing enemies to noisey blurry-edged shapes until they were almost on you. Both very simple tricks that felt more cinema than video game, but that worked beautifully as small palate cleansers against the procession of otherwise eternally grimdark corridors. There were bigger beats too, like an almost Uncharted-like water slide moment as you woosh on your back through huge water channels avoiding pipes and turbines.
As well as these changes in tone there’s what Glen called “beta courses”, which are basically areas and routes away from the main progress of the game. Some of these are quite big, and, while the story is basically linear, they add an element of less predictable freedom and exploration. Sometimes you’ll not realise you’ve taken a side path initially because there’s so much going on. There’s a balance as well here, between risking what resources you have against potential encounters and the promise of finding more.
From the beautiful but slab-heavy environments, to the crushing combat, I liked everything I saw in The Callisto Protocol. There’s an obvious and undeniable Dead Space heart beating in its exposed ribcage – from things like monsters that burst from very familiar wall vents, or the ‘cut off their tentacles’ messages warning you to sever bits off creatures to stop them mutating into larger forms. But this still feels like its own thing. A more contemporary update on the ideas that feels more aware of modern tastes and tropes compared, say to the Dead Space Remake gameplay I obtained hands on with formerly. I liked both, to be clear, however where the brand-new Dead Space is a terrific reimagining of the initial, The Callisto Protocol seems like a brand-new instalment on the planet of area scary.
Source: gamesradar.com