This game has a pretty interesting premise with a story centered around cults and the Cthulhu legend. I donā€™t know much about either so I was intrigued and since I received this game in a bundle some time ago, I wanted to give it a shot. The game is narratively focused so Iā€™ll talk mostly about theme, art, and story as I go.

Iā€™ll start with the look and feel of the game by saying that I have middling opinions on how this game looks. The textures are good for the most part and convey the atmosphere pretty well. The game falls apart though when it comes to animations. Everybody moves and expresses themselves worse than cardboard. Remember the canned talking animations of Skyrim? Itā€™s that but in a narrative focused game and worse. The characters need to be believable but when someone is talking in a relaxed way while their hands do frantic motions or are frozen in front of them, it breaks a lot of the illusion. However, the rest of the art, atmosphere, and lighting looks pretty good.

When it comes to story, I wonā€™t claim to be a narrative expert. In my playtime, I didnā€™t get hooked by the story at any point. The characters are trying to do that thing where they provide little detail and are therefore mysterious. That didnā€™t track well with me and instead they felt dull and shallow. It sucks because some of the dialog is really good but there isnā€™t enough of it to carry a narrative game. The best bits of story are told to you in cutscene form and this game almost seems like itā€™s better suited as an FMV game or similar. The biggest benefit to the story though is the multiple choices. I felt my choices were impactful and they donā€™t let you exhaust dialog for other options. You have one conversation and there is at least an illusion that you couldā€™ve had many more discrete conversations.

The RPG skills are another middling feature as they help a lot of the exploration and conversational aspects of the game out and yet theyā€™re paper thin at the same time. The game has you assigning points and yet I donā€™t feel that it wouldā€™ve played any differently than if Iā€™d just picked skills at the start and nothing afterwards.

Lastly the sound is another 5/10. Sometimes it really sells the horror of a scene. But a lot of the time the same repeated music tracks take me out. And the compression used on the voices is embarrassingly bad. It harms the performances so much that I began tweaking my setup because I thought I had audio issues.

To wrap it up, I wanted to like this game and I still like aspects of it. Itā€™s maybe worth playing if you catch it on sale or get it in a bundle. And since itā€™s a short experience, some of these gripes arenā€™t dealbreakers. I just found it to be a disappointing use of the setting and theme and I wish more couldā€™ve been done to immerse me in the game.

If youā€™ve played it, Iā€™d love to hear your thoughts on it!

  • Zahille7@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Which Call of Cthulhu? Cause I played the one from 5 years ago or so, and kind of enjoyed it. Like it was fine as a Lovecraftian story and all, but the gameplay was a bit slow. I got one ending, then I just reloaded the save right before the ending and got the other one too.

      • CleoTheWizard@lemmy.worldOP
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        7 months ago

        Can confirm, itā€™s the one from five years ago. I still enjoyed it btw but it feels much older then 5 years

        • Zahille7@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I think my favorite parts were hiding from the thing in that museum mission, and the very, very ending where youā€™re up on the cliff looking out at the sea and horizon.

          • CleoTheWizard@lemmy.worldOP
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            7 months ago

            Absolutely, there are gem moments in this game. Which makes it kind of tragic that I couldnā€™t get into it. The art is really good and so is the theme. I just wish the mechanics of the Shambler section and the psych ward were used more.

    • MamboGator@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I definitely started reading this as though it was about the older CoC game, Dark Corners of the Earth. Itā€™s a bad sign when so many descriptions of a 5-year-old game also apply to one thatā€™s almost 20 years old.

      Dark Corners of the Earth is actually pretty great, if anyone would rather give that a try. Thereā€™s one level set in a factory that really drags, but everything else is enjoyable. Thereā€™s one sequence in the hotel that feels straight out of The Shadow Over Innsmouth.

  • Lunar@lemmy.wtf
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    7 months ago

    The RPG skills are another middling feature as they help a lot of the exploration and conversational aspects of the game out and yet theyā€™re paper thin at the same time. The game has you assigning points and yet I donā€™t feel that it wouldā€™ve played any differently than if Iā€™d just picked skills at the start and nothing afterwards.

    The RPG skills in a few scenes work as skill checks and can lead to different outcomes, impacting the story.

    You can get a few playthroughs out of the game fiddling with them and the variations to the story they entail.