Legends of Runeterra (and some other card games)

I hit Master rank in Legends of Runeterra today, signalling me being in roughly the top 1000 players in the Europe region. It never crossed my mind to write about it since I don't usually do that for games with no clear end, but I'm not sure why. Anyways, as I feel reaching Master rank is sort of the "end" of my journey, being the highest rank one can achieve, I figured I might as well give my thoughts on the game, now that I'm "qualified" to do so.
This post will be a little longer, as I also wish to explore some other card games I've played.

Card games are something I played more as a child. They tend to be pretty exclusively PvP-based, and as I've gotten older, all PvP games have become inherently competitive for me. Sometimes I wish I could enjoy the games without caring about the outcome, but the mindset of improving has been ingrained too deep in me to not try to learn from losses and get better. This sadly involves a degree of beating myself up over losing as a form of discipline, increasing the frustration these games supply me with.
I started off playing Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh as those card games first came out and my brother bought the cards. He needed people to play against, I needed something to do with my life back before I had unlimited computer access. So he would always make the decks, hand me one, and we'd play, me losing like... 80% of the time, I guess, but it didn't bother me back then. I had no competitive drive, I just had fun.

I think a lot of my attitude from that point onwards towards card games can be derived from that last paragraph.
Making the decks has never been the fun part of card games for me. There's an incredible amount of cards in most card games. Even just reading them all (and you do have to read them all, lest you don't know what you're not putting in your deck) can be a daunting task, let alone thinking of all the combinations they could be used together in. Normally, I would praise that kind of complexity and depth, but there's a huge problem here. The problem is known as netdecking, and unless you're willing to spend an ungodly amount of time considering all the options available to you and have the skills to actually make the right conclusions from considering those options, you're just not going to make a better deck than somebody else has. You can play for fun and maybe feel like you've "earned" the victories by making your own decks, but that's no proof to others. Besides, where do you draw the line? Can you ask for advice? Can you look at what other people are playing and try to guess what decks they're running to imitate them? At some point, you'll gravitate towards playing what other people are playing, whether it's blatantly copying a deck online 1:1, or indirectly doing so by copying ideas and cards from the decks you play against (many of whom blatantly copied a deck online). There's nothing wrong with copying though. It's adapting, and not adapting is begging to lose, so you might as well not lie to yourself and take one of the good decks straight away. Of note are game modes like Arena (I think it was called that) in Hearthstone, or Expedition in Legends of Runeterra, where you can't just copy a deck, because you have highly limited choices what you can use. These bring back the skill of constructing a deck, but sadly have another caveat, which is the focus of the next paragraph.
That problem is luck. Games are so much based on the luck of the draw, in Expeditions the luck of the draft, and even the luck of the matchup, as the odds are heavily tilted right at the start, depending on what deck archetypes are facing up against each other. I think luck is both one of card games' greatest strengths and weaknesses. I could experience it back in the day when I was playing against my brother. I can be sure he was a far better player than I was. He also knew the decks we were both playing, since he put them together. And on top of that, I would wager he more often than not gave me the worse deck. But I still won a significant amount of games - something impossible in 1-on-1 games based on skill. I was so far behind, I should have lost every time, like I did in chess. But unlike chess, I didn't refuse to keep playing against him, probably because I had a chance to win. And I think that's the strength of card games, that luck can offset everything else and give you the perfect cards to win an otherwise doomed match. Sadly, it can also do the opposite, causing frustration at your inability to do anything.

Now, combining those two elements, what's left for you, the player? Making your deck is (mostly) not up to you. What cards you draw are not up to you. All you can do is play them. While I will admit that it's exactly this skill that differentiates great players from good ones, namely knowing the cards and thus the possible futures, how likely they are to occur, and accordingly, when you should play which cards, it's still not a large portion of what decides the outcome. I don't really feel like I've ever outplayed my opponent. Best I can feel about myself is relieved that I made the right decision in hoping they couldn't react to something I did, or that my stalling allowed me to counter their actions, instead of the other way around. But it still is mostly luck, not skills like aiming a gun in a shooter, nor psychology (or whatever their special term for this is) like predicting the enemy's next action in a fighting game.

I think a lot of card games since Hearthstone haven't been all that different. The constantly increasing mana curve has been the main difference from older card games, instead of being able to play almost whatever you got in hand. Runeterra mianly differs from Hearthstone in that the blocker can, for the most part, decide who fights whom. However, like many other card games that resemble Hearthstone, the differences are minor enough that they don't usually change the essence of what a game is. They all feel the same, looking from the outside, even if the new mechanics are a breath of fresh air to the player who has grided a single game for too long. The reason Runeterra is the first card game I've gotten so far in, is that it's the first card game that has given me the resources to build the decks I wanted. I'd argue that most other card games, while not having a technical paywall, released new cards too fast, and gave too few away for free to allow for people to be competitive while playing a reasonable amount of time.
Maybe it comes as no surprise, based on what I've already told you, that I don't really like card games. I don't like building my decks, I don't like netdecking, I don't like losing to luck (and don't care enough for winning due to it). There have been some better attempts at card games, but sadly they've died off. One I quite liked was Duelyst, which also introduced a board to the game, bringing a new aspect of non-luck-based gameplay. I think that is a massive improvement to shifting games away from being luck-based and increasing depth. They also had an amazing feature allowing to swap one card from your hand every turn, lessening the effect of the luck of the draw on the game. Why they scrapped the latter later on is beyond me. Sadly, it was also plagued by stuff costing a bit too much, especially as they started to run out of money before finally closing up.
I think the only card game I can truly say I think is good, is Prismata. It has no luck, no making of decks whatsoever, and no imbalance of matchups since you're playing the same deck. It's a game purely based on skill, yet it feels every bit as fun as the other card games I've played. (Okay, I actually really enjoyed the board mechanics in Duelyst and related board-based card games, but that's not important right now.) It also has an amazing AI, providing a challenging game to all but the very best of players, yet hitting that sweet spot of allowing you to feel good about yourself by letting you win more than 50% of the games. It's also dead. Not that it was ever alive. I don't think it ever hit even 100 simultaneous players, and is at maybe around 10 right now. And that's sad, because it also means there's no development resources to keep the game fresh and going.

So I didn't explain what Legends of Runeterra is actually about, but should I really? I think a lot of people have played at least one card game with attackers, blockers, and spells. They're all so very similar. Hearthstone mainly brought in the constant mana curve which gates playing cards, and Runeterra mainly switches it up with the blocking player deciding who fights whom, alternating turns letting both players play within the same "mana turn" with the attacker alternating between "mana turns", and maybe the 3 mana that can be left over each turn to go into a reserve for spells only. Draw a card, play your units and spells, attack, end your turn. They're all the same, and if I had to recommend one card game, I would indeed recommend Legends of Runeterra right now. It's got a big company backing it financially. It is very generous with cards, allowing anyone to be competitive, and it's still fresh right now, with promised changes bringing a lot of variety. Personally though, I don't think I'll be playing it much anymore, and I wouldn't recommend it (nor any other card game) to someone who doesn't already know they like card games. As explained, I don't like that so much is decided by just copying the best decks and being lucky. I feel the losses aggrevating because they're undeserved, and the victories meaningless, because they too are undeserved.

Slipstream

Racing games are in a weird spot for me where I really liked a few as a child, but I haven't played anything quite as good in the last... 10 years? So I'm not sure if it's nostalgia or if I really haven't found / given any good racing games a try. Well, I played some Slipstream today, and it was at least as bad as the other ones I've played recently. So that just adds to my reluctance to try them out.

Slipstream is very simple, veering more towards "realistic" racing games. You got your accelerate, break, and left and right turns, and that's all. The tracks consist of straight segments, and curving segments. You can execute a drift by a quick and simple key combination, and driving behind a car will give you an acceleration boost.
You have 3 attributes on your car - acceleration, top speed, and handling. Handling is useless since you'll need to drift on every curve anyways, and that will be enough to make every curve if you're playing well. Acceleration is only useful if you're not playing well and losing speed, at which point taking it would gimp your other stats putting you even further behind. And then finally top speed is all you need if you can just play well and not hit walls or other cars too much.
Speaking of other cars, they don't exactly follow your rules. Their speed and turning is "as is convenient". Some examples include: Everyone overtaking you at the start of a race with extreme acceleration, possibly so it would be "fun" to catch up to each of them? They can execute instantaneous turns to avoid crashes. And I could swear there was something off with how fast they went at different parts of the race. It was as if they were trying to keep a semi-constant gap with each other when you weren't there.

Overall, the cheating AI and having very few game mechanics sucked. It had some different game modes but there wasn't much of a functional difference. Cars felt the same, tracks felt the same, and oh I hate having car collisions in racing games where it's not some central game mechanic. A penalty should not be imposed on me because someone else is occupying the same space as me while the lead, who is already better, is driving further away without interruption.
To compare to the racing games mentioned at the start, I was a big fan of Trackmania. The tracks were really interesting, had realistic-seeming physics (yes, I do question being able to drive on walls, the ceiling, or flying through the air to land so very nicely again, but I never felt like I was non-physically glued to the track), and I could see other cars without bloody running into them. Another one was some flash game, the name of which eludes me, that very much had collision as a game mechanic. It had massively unique cars from formula-like cars that were super fast, but you basically lost if anyone hit you or vice versa, to a damn truck which was slow but could just ram the opponents to oblivion. It had ramps, jumping through rings, doing tricks in the air for speed boosts... It was great, and a good example of varied cars and how to incorporate car collisions into a racing game without it feeling shit.

I got rambling a bit in the end about other games, but I wanted to mention them, since I have no clue when I'll next play a racing game. I'm trying to steer clear from any aiming for realism at least, since I really don't feel like driving on a 2D track just going left, right, and forward is fun. But Slipstream, I wouldn't recommend.

Bloodstained: Curse of the Moon

As I first saw Bloodstained: Curse of the Moon, I thought I misremembered. Bloodstained had... graphics. Real graphics, not the 8-bit era graphics I was seeing here. Well, luckily I was right. Curse of the Moon is a short game made as a stretch goal reward of the Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night (which I will get around to eventually) Kickstarter, and I had added them both to my backlog as they came out.
Now, I can't say I have any nostalgia for the gaming of the 80s or 90s (possibly because I wasn't alive for most of that time, and was definitely not playing video games), or even that of 10 years past. I think games are becoming better and better thanks to advances in technology, mainly processsing power and tools, but also the amount of resources people put into game developent as a non-niche entertainment branch, and I'm happy to keep playing fresh games. Still, I thought, people are saying it's like an authentic Castlevania knockoff, why not experience it.

It definitely feels true to everything I know about the 8-bit era. From the graphics, to the sounds, to the controls, to how the character is obeying some very weird rules of motion which, under some observation, can be seen as very primitive and simple methods for approximating the physics of (the various parts of) jumping. I've never played (any) Castlevania, but I recognized it, somehow, so make of that what you will.

But ho boy, am I glad I'm not playing these games anymore. Mainly from the aspects of game design and system limitations, we've advanced leaps and bounds. So it's not just the hardware that has gotten better, the developers have too. (That is, if you ignore the lower-end who are producing trash because it's so easy to do these days.)
This devolved into less of a review of the game and more about how games are getting better. Honestly though, that's probably a better topic. This game's short, and has nothing new, literally. If you're getting old and want a childhood nostalgia experience, but for some reason don't want to play one of the actually old games, then, sure, I guess. For everyone else, play something new, from at least the last decade. New games are good, trust me.

Far: Lone Sails

Today's entry is on something that turned out to be a bit less of a game than I expected. I would categorize it under the "walking simulator" genre, even though it might appear to be more of a puzzle/simulation game, but I think calling it either of those would be misleading. You're not walking through the game either, strictly speaking, but Far: Lone Sails definitely has the air of a walking simulator.

The game's very short, lasting between 2-3 hours for the first playthrough, and consists of riding your wind- and engine-powered metal box on wheels through a desolate wasteland of ruins and abandoned technology. You have to manage your ship, picking up fuel, adding it to the engine, keeping the engine running, making sure the wind is in your favor when using your sails, and performing repairs on your ship.
It may sound like a simulation or a tough job, but the hardest part is the platforming you have to do in your cramped ship. There's no real possibility to fail either, so you just keep going until you eventually reach your next "stop". These stops each feature some sort of abandoned machination and a little puzzle you have to solve to progress onwards. Carry a few things, push some buttons, spray some water around - simple stuff. It's just a little something to make you not just watch the game as if it was movie, which it kind of is.

There isn't a lot to really do, and no choices. You complete your series of tasks like every other player before you, and the rest is watching the scenery unfold. Now, the unfolding scenery is nice, and I liked the atmosphere, but I just want something more out of my games than watching the world pass by. It was a bit of a snoozefest, and I'm afraid that without the chore of keeping my ship running and solving the puzzles, I would've fallen asleep listening to the serene soundtrack.

So, from a personal perspective, I can't recommend Far: Lone Sails. However, if you know yourself to be a fan of walking simulators, meditative experiences, or whatever you could classify what I described as, I don't see anything inherently wrong with it and you can give it a whirl for the couple of hours it lasts. But if you're looking for a game to play, this struggles to be categorized as one.

Roguelands

I'm on a streak of old(er) games recently and I just feel like mentioning it every time. This time the 13th oldest game left in my backlog - Roguelands. Either games don't age well, I'm on a bad streak of games right now, or I was just more lax with my picks back in the day. (Probably the latter, as there's actually plenty of great old games.)

So, Roguelands promises you a (potentially multiplayer) action roguelike experience. Tons of weapons, tons of equipment, many different areas to explore, and progression for days! It's probably not technically false, but boy does it fall flat on its face. The equipment diversity isn't really there. There's just stat upgrades for the most part. Despite being promised 15 different clases, combined with an allegiance, character types, and more, it's still just stat differences - no unique abilities or weapons. I didn't play it for too long so it was difficult to see all of what the game had to offer, but it's a huge grind to get much anything, and there's no good reason for that.
The different areas are composed of the same large rectangular blocks with the textures swapped. It's not level design, and it's an insult to procedural generation if it is that. There's some difference in enemies, but most of them are either semi-stationary mindless creatures or floaty things which jerkily move towards you, all in a very similar manner. No destructible terrain, but you can "build" your ship... as if that did anything.
And finally the combat, which is all this game really has going for it in terms of gameplay, is floaty, repetitive, and boring. Stamina? That's never going to run out, why even worry about it, just jump and dash endlessly. The game even tells you that you're not going to get anywhere by running, just dash everywhere. Why even add running in? Health though? Well, at first these guys 1-shot you, and if not you don't regen any and are doomed soon enough. But if you survive that you eventually just become basically unkillable and can regen it at will. There's no semblance of balance.

I'm somewhat upset, because this looked like a good idea a la Terraria or at least Starbound (I'd recommend the former), albeit without the mining and building. But the execution of this is just so sloppy and terrible. It's like they kept adding more and more "content" without stopping to consider if any of it was any good, and then just left it in this seemingly unfinished state, as far as polish is concerned. I hate this kind of development. Quality over quantity, every single time, that's how it should be. So no, I can't possibly recommend Roguelands.

Katamari Damacy Reroll

Straight up classic, this one. All the way from 2004. I don't usually play games this old, but it's a remake of a PS2 game that I've heard significantly much about, so I simply had to try it regardless. It's Katamari Damacy.
It's a game about rolling around a ball, running over items smaller than your ball to attach them to your ball and grow it while avoiding running into things larger than your ball, lest you break your momentum and bits of your ball chip off. There's different levels, each with a starting size, a size goal, a timer, and uh... That's it. That's the game.

I'm not going to lie, I was expecting something a little bit more, but then again, it's literally everything I heard it was. Which is what I just described. Honestly though, it's essentially a 2004 indie game, so it's not all too bad for that. For the most part it's polished and nails the rolling activity. The levels you roll around, the size progression of items, the humorous aspect of what you're doing, and oh, most definitely the soundtrack, are all great. I have to make special mention of the soundtrack because it kept me playing as I was about to leave due to the game not being quite gripping enough. I usually couldn't understand the lyrics, but it had amazing energy.
I can't conclude without mentioning a very significant downside though, which was that the control scheme for the keyboard (and mouse, except there wasn't much mouse support) was terrible. I'm afraid many people exclusively play games with a controller, so they haven't the slightest idea how to make controls for a keyboard. A mouse maps pretty well to an analog stick, but alas, no mouse look. As fluent and rapid control over the katamari was necessary, the terrible control scheme was hugely detrimental to my experience.

I think most of the positive reviews come from people who played the original on the PS2 back in the day, and that's fine. But as a first time player, there isn't much of a game here, to be honest. The shoddy KB&M support doesn't help either. It isn't a long game, and at least I can now say I've played Katamari, but I still wouldn't recommend it for first time players. If you're already familiar with the game then I don't think my opinion is important for you. Still loved the soundtrack though...

The Final Station

Oh boy, oh boy, a game all the way from 2016, from before I even started this blog. It's about the 35th oldest game in my backlog. It's The Final Station! Honestly though, 4 years doesn't seem that long ago anymore, considering how long I've been playing games. If anything, I'm glad most everything left in my backlog is from 2016 and onwards, not older. But on to the game.

The Final Station is an Adventure game, if anything. It consists of hopping onto a train, using what little food and medkits you have to make sure any of your passangers don't die of hunger or blood loss while meddling with some knobs and buttons to keep the train going. And by fiddling I really do mean just pressing a few buttons in different locations every now and then. While you're not doing any of that, you can try to squeeze in some story by listening to (reading) your co-workers on radio for a few sentences of dialogue, listening to (still reading, there's no voices of any kind in this game) your passangers talk to each other, or reading station background information.
The other half of the game is when you arrive at a station, you conveniently have to find a code to unlock your train. (Why lock it in the first place, I will never understand.) Finding this code means running around a few buildings, talking to people, or trying to scrape more lore off of them or the notes on walls. Mostly though, the world has gone to shit and you have to be shooting non-zombies and taking what few survivors there are back to your train. Manage your ammo, click boxes to get supplies, and punch the not-zombies in the guts.

Honestly, when I first started it, I was expecting some sort of a simulation game? Taking care of my passangers, making difficult choices, fixing up my train. Well, that turned out to be trivial, and the majority of time was spent outside the train instead. And no, that part wasn't any deep either. A few enemy types, and just your run-on-the-mill pistol and fist. With limited ammo, each fight was a slog as you had to charge up your fist and wait for it to cool down between punching enemies. (Excuse me, what?) No upgrade system or anything either.
So what I hoped was left was the story? The lore? The atmosphere? Well, the latter more than the former. For better or worse, there were no walls of text. You had to piece together the story from sentences of dialogue and scraps on the walls. Even then it was scarce and loosely connected, with seemingly no storyline or goal. The atmosphere, while nice, couldn't save this game, I'm afraid.

So there you have it. The Final Station is a pretty lackluster Adventure game with a little bit of running and gunning (but mostly waiting for your fists to cool down). While I couldn't point to a better game of this type, I feel like both the idea and execution are lacking. So no, no recommendation. Go find something else entirely to play, this one's no good.

Grim Nights

Grim Nights is a lovely little Managament, RTS, Tower Defense hybrid. It's not too expensive, it's not too long, and it has practically no replayability, but I enjoyed my time with it until I lost halfway through due to unforeseen enemy attack patterns.
The premise is that you have to survive 13 nights of increasingly difficult zombie (and other monster) onslaughts while also building up your town. The zombies approach from the right, your town builds up from the left - it's fairly straightforward. You got a few different resources, a few different buildings, some upgrades to those buildings... Each villager comes with their own speciality (if any), and can be assigned to a job.

There's not a lot to think about nor explore, sadly. Just assign all villagers to gather resources you need as fast as possible, everyone else to expand, while keeping enough troops to defend your base. There's a limit of about three melee warriors before they can't reach the enemy anymore since units don't stack. So basically everything should be poured into archers to mow the enemies down with a rain of arrows. (There are a few exceptions though, one of which managed to end my run, so maybe the balance isn't that off.)
At first the mine system seemed innovative, but it boiled down to just digging out rooms as fast as possible and strip mining all the resources within. Further, the ladder system was god awful due to the units lacking vertical pathfinding. I think perhaps the unit management and control was my largest gripe with the game, followed by the lack of meaningful choices.

Overall, I actually liked playing it. I considered giving it a spot on my list, but... Thinking back on it, it wasn't really that unique in any regard, lacked polish in some areas (though had plenty in others), didn't have content nor choice... How could I even recommend it, much less give it a spot? But still, a partial recommendation for Grim Nights, I guess. I think it's fun, even if not for long.

Masters of Anima

I can't fathom how I've queued up so many RTS games for myself, considering how I tend to dislike them. Feels like every 5th game is an RTS, in disguise or otherwise. Today's personal disappointment is Masters of Anima. Despite not giving it too long of a shot after I figured out it's an RTS, and not something magnificent enough to pique my interest, I can still give a more or less objective description of what it is, and what it maybe does well. The usual treatment then.

Masters of Anima tries to be many things. It's mostly an RTS, I would say, but it mixes in a good amount of ARPG, Story, and Puzzles. (And on a side note, ARPGs aside, I'm rather opposed to all of these in games. Woe is me.)
The meat of the game is summoning different units, sending them to attack different things, or do other things, such as interacting with the environment to shape it. A seasoned RTS player would be alienated and disgusted by the inefficiency of the control scheme of this game, but I don't find it so bad for the more casual type of game it is. The content of the game is nicely shaped to provide incentive to split your troops and have them perform different tasks, much like teaching you the basics of playing an RTS, especially from the viewpoint of a PC-centric player. For what it does, it seems well made at least, so I can't objectively criticize it there.
The ARPG elements come through a personal character you control via the usual WASD movement system, upgrades you can get yourself over the course of the game, and map exploration. Speaking of maps, they are rather large, but overall the game is still level-based.
The story is the usual boring unoriginal tra... I mean, not to my liking. I've a high standard for storytelling in games, and very few games (with actual gameplay) indeed have had stories I would consider passable, let alone good. So make of my opinion what you will. It's got full voice acting though.
And finally, the puzzles are the kind of casual stuff I've come to expect from "puzzle games" these days. They're a time wasting annoyance at worst, but if you consider enemy attack patterns and how to counter them a puzzle, then maybe there are redeeming puzzle aspects to this game after all.

So overall, Masters of Anima does two things wrong. More importantly, it's of a type of game I don't like. More seriously, it tries to be multiple games, the inefficiency of which I've explained many times. It's not a good RTS, it's not a good ARPG, it doesn't have a good story, and it doesn't have good puzzles. As a hybrid, I even dare say it does well, but I also dare say that most people don't care about hybrids. They want a solid experience in their selected genre, not a mediocre one in multiple ones. So that's an objective reason to not recommend it, but do keep in mind that I mainly just don't like these genres.

Dungreed

Entering Dungreed, I was told it's a worse version of Shovel Knight, which I remember playing at some point in the rather distant past. For whatever reason, it didn't stick with me, so I didn't have the highest hopes for Dungreed either, but in I went.

Dungreed is a sidescrolling room-based dungeon crawler. It features about six floors of content worth 20-30 minutes each, plus a bossfight for each floor, and then a little extra. Of course dying means going back to the beginning, so unless you're really good, the game will last longer than 3 hours until first completion. But 6 hours? 10 hours? That depends on you.
You begin each run with a basic sword. By exploring the dungeon, you can find other weapons, both melee and ranged, as well as some other equipment. And as is tradition, all of that is lost when you die. What you keep is experience, any money you didn't spend in the dungeon (up to a cap), and any equipment you unlocked or villagers you saved. The saved villagers can offer you upgrades, which break all of what I told you in small ways.

It's a solid formula, and it is evident the game has been polished and made with care. The upgrade options are varied, there's a healthy amount of RNG... The weapon variety is perhaps the strongest aspect of them all, providing a lot replayability as you experiment with different weapons.
The pixel art is solid and the soundtrack ranges from mediocre to pretty damn good on some tracks.
But it's also missing a lot. Mostly, it's just short on content and balance. The game's over fairly quickly, but even before it ends, you can probably see most of the room layouts multiple times, most enemies to the point of boredom, and a ton of useless equipment. On the balance side, overall the game is far too easy for my tastes, with no adjustable difficulty. Multiple pieces of equipment or certain strategies which I don't want to spoil allow you to just facetank or rush through everything. Despite the fun combat, it's not a challenge.

All in all, Dungreed offers a short but polished action roguelike experience, probably enjoyable by all fans of the genre, but more so by the more casual-inclined. I feel it had the potential to be something much greater had it introduced more content, more variety, and more options and challenge. As it stands now though, it was fun, I liked playing it to first completion, but I wouldn't play it again or try to 100% it. As such, a slot on my favorite games' list, albeit below the line.

Ghost of a Tale

Ghost of a Tale is a Stealth Adventure game (and very far from an Action RPG, as it sells itself for some reason) where you play as a mouse locked in a jail looking for your wife and a way out, or something. There's a lot of stuff to pick up and interact with, a lot of text to read if you care to look at items, talk to characters, and read papers you find, and a lot of running around looking for a way to progress. Except you have to be quiet so you're not detected and so you're more sneaking than running.

But what I found there wasn't a lot to do were meaningful things. I failed to find any sort of enjoyment in picking up items and running around doing whatever I needed to do. While I can't say that it was always easy and obvious what I had to do next, I never felt like I was solving a puzzle, but more like I was playing a guessing game. It wasn't challenging, it wasn't humorous, it wasn't fun. Neither was the story I read any captivating, but my lukewarm attitude towards story-based games is nothing new. What RPG elements remained in terms of equipment and stats were of no significant point either.

To conclude, a short review for a short attempt. I just couldn't bring myself to play it any longer, as there wasn't so much as a single aspect of the game I was enjoying. Combine that with the game being... not badly, but amateurishly made, and you might understand why it couldn't captivate me. I wouldn't recommend it, but maybe some people are bigger fans of mediocre stealth and story games.