2 personer fandt denne anmeldelse brugbar
Anbefalet
0.0 timer de seneste 2 uger / 7.5 timer registreret i alt
Indsendt: 23. maj 2018 kl. 22:11

The Last Station is a tense, atmosphere, often confusing but always compelling game.

You play as a silent train conductor, leading passengers to different shelters in a grey post apocalyptic setting, the gameplay is split into two parts.

The first part, and what's the meat of the game, are the on foot sections where you explore different areas for supplies and to find more survivors, while fighting off enemies that could be zombies or aliens or something else (they also look like older versions of the main character from Limbo). There's only three weapons total in this game (and one you don't get till near the end), pistol, shotgun and machine gun. All of em pack a decent punch and feel good to use, but ammos limited, though you had have a weaker melee attack.

These areas have an eerie loneliness to em, with most buildings being abandoned beyond the occasional corpse. There's also a nice tense element since all of the areas are darkened until you open the door, and surprise attacks from enemies are quite common, so you always enter each area with at least a bit of trepidation. You also can find logs and notes that give more hints on what happened exactly, though if i'm being honest I still couldn't fully explain the games plot to you. Everything is presented as crypticly as possible, and any answers you do get just raise further questions, it's def interesting, and probably meant to let you draw your own conclusions but wish maybe there was a little more focus to it.

The second main part of the game are the train sections as you travel from area to area. Here you have to take care of your passengers, feeding them and providing medicine so they don't die, in addition to maintaining the train, which are presented through minigames. You can also email your fellow conductors, which is the only time your character actually speaks in game. Your passengers talk amongst themselves, giving more clues about the world, though you'll often have to miss em cause you'll be busy with other matters. I actually kind of dig it in a way, it feels more authentic, like you're overhearing snatches of a conversation as you work, but it'll def be frustrating for many that you can't listen in without consequence.

Soundtrack is appropriately minimalistic, but sets the tone well, the sprite work is excellent, very fluid, with the enemies having a jerky quality to their movements that make them legit unverving and sets them apart well from the human cast.

Overall, if you like games with a creepy atmosphere and go into it knowing you'll likely not fully understand the plot, at least at first, I'd say it's worth checking out.


Fandt du denne anmeldelse brugbar? Ja Nej Sjov Pris
Kommentarer er slået fra for denne anmeldelse.