KORT SAGT: Trods en efterhånden noget forældet designfilosofi fænger Supermassive Games’ nyeste mordsimulator med et underholdende mysterium, et fænomenalt truecrime-setup og masser af bestialske dødsfælder.
Min anmeldelse for Soundvenue: https://soundvenue.com/kultur/2022/11/the-dark-pictures-the-devil-in-me-er-en-jigsaw-vaerdig-mordsimulator-499200
Min anmeldelse for Soundvenue: https://soundvenue.com/kultur/2022/11/the-dark-pictures-the-devil-in-me-er-en-jigsaw-vaerdig-mordsimulator-499200
The conceit behind Supermassive Games’ body of horror games was a noble one to begin with. The simple idea of a playable slasher film pushed to the extreme; taking after the likes of “choose your own adventure” novels but most notably the interactive dramas of David Cage- which at this point stand as some of the most potent pieces of camp entertainment the medium has seen (that’s another conversation though). With Until Dawn they delivered on this promise with a game that was effectively curated in its tone and pacing, balancing between the joyful excesses of the genre with some genuinely visceral gnarliness (no doubt borrowing influence from Larry Fessenden who has a starring role in the game and had a pronounced hand in the writer’s room). After the game’s success, Supermassive went on to produce “The Dark Pictures Anthology” which was in essence a collection of ‘Until Dawn’ clones with what essentially felt like half the budget, production time, and length. The ambition had me excited but within the first hour of playing ‘Man of Medan’ I realized just how short it falls from their potential after how good Until Dawn was. Fast forward to now and we’re on ‘episode four’ of ‘season one’ of this project and its safe to say that Supermassive is utterly washed. I think I gave a lot of credit towards the bigger vision they were aspiring to but at this point I simply don’t have the patience for this brand of lazy, copy-paste development anymore- especially after seeing the refreshingly moderate effort placed into their spiritual successor to Until Dawn, 'The Quarry'.
Much of the appeal of horror to me is its sheer devotion to sensory affect and how far it can tease the participator, whether it be a film, novel, or video game. I believe with the latter medium we’re able to gauge the most potent application of the genre and what it can accomplish regarding the player’s interaction with the environment as well as other characters. There is literally so much you can do within the genre, so it makes it frustrating that Supermassive skimp and stumble away achieving the bare minimum almost every time. The typical slasher runs about eighty to ninety minutes so it’s shocking to me that these Dark Pictures games are en masse paced so poorly and proceed to take up an interminable six hours. It’s over an hour of gameplay for ‘The Devil In Me’ to reached its primarily location and half of that time is spent on a pointless opening set piece that acts as a tedious tutorial and also bears no real significance to the overarching story. The rest of this hour is its own dirge of setting up the ensemble’s dynamics and basic plot points in the blandest, most expositional manner possible- and rest assured reader, this is the worst and most cynical band of personalities Supermassive has conjured yet. Unfortunately, if not even Ashley Tisdale can sell the dialogue and development her character was given in House of Ashes, then Academy Award nominated Jessie Buckley certainly won’t here.
What's left beyond the uncanny valley-ass performances and the expressionless blocking in the cutscenes is a game that never moves at a natural pace; instead playing like being trapped in the apathetic body of a rusting tin man at all times as well as littered with jittery camera angles and glitches and lacking any sense of motivated lighting to add visual flourish or at the very least helpfully guide the player. As all these Dark Pictures titles go, once the violence ramps up its silly attempts at raising the pulse of the player get slightly more fruitful but as in the case of all the Dark Pictures titles, it's hollow thrills with no lasting resonance. No intricacies, nothing for the inquisitive player to glean or discover of its characters or setting that won't be explained away by the dialogue or needlessly made obvious in the lore newspaper clippings cluttered around the map. At the end of the day, there really was no point in me spending time writing about this prime example of dubious corporate horror when there's no shortage of real darkness in the world, but it's defeating when these small pleasures could be crafted to be so much better. If anything I feel as though this is a personal epitaph for a developer that suggests I may not be returning for 'season two'.
Much of the appeal of horror to me is its sheer devotion to sensory affect and how far it can tease the participator, whether it be a film, novel, or video game. I believe with the latter medium we’re able to gauge the most potent application of the genre and what it can accomplish regarding the player’s interaction with the environment as well as other characters. There is literally so much you can do within the genre, so it makes it frustrating that Supermassive skimp and stumble away achieving the bare minimum almost every time. The typical slasher runs about eighty to ninety minutes so it’s shocking to me that these Dark Pictures games are en masse paced so poorly and proceed to take up an interminable six hours. It’s over an hour of gameplay for ‘The Devil In Me’ to reached its primarily location and half of that time is spent on a pointless opening set piece that acts as a tedious tutorial and also bears no real significance to the overarching story. The rest of this hour is its own dirge of setting up the ensemble’s dynamics and basic plot points in the blandest, most expositional manner possible- and rest assured reader, this is the worst and most cynical band of personalities Supermassive has conjured yet. Unfortunately, if not even Ashley Tisdale can sell the dialogue and development her character was given in House of Ashes, then Academy Award nominated Jessie Buckley certainly won’t here.
What's left beyond the uncanny valley-ass performances and the expressionless blocking in the cutscenes is a game that never moves at a natural pace; instead playing like being trapped in the apathetic body of a rusting tin man at all times as well as littered with jittery camera angles and glitches and lacking any sense of motivated lighting to add visual flourish or at the very least helpfully guide the player. As all these Dark Pictures titles go, once the violence ramps up its silly attempts at raising the pulse of the player get slightly more fruitful but as in the case of all the Dark Pictures titles, it's hollow thrills with no lasting resonance. No intricacies, nothing for the inquisitive player to glean or discover of its characters or setting that won't be explained away by the dialogue or needlessly made obvious in the lore newspaper clippings cluttered around the map. At the end of the day, there really was no point in me spending time writing about this prime example of dubious corporate horror when there's no shortage of real darkness in the world, but it's defeating when these small pleasures could be crafted to be so much better. If anything I feel as though this is a personal epitaph for a developer that suggests I may not be returning for 'season two'.
Dos quatro jogos da Dark Pictures esse daqui para mim foi o mais tenso e que até me deu um certo medinho. Acho histórias "caseiras" muito mais assustadoras do que coisas assombradas, criaturas e etc... Ter um ser humano que não há nada de especial, mas é extremamente cruel, frio e inteligente te perseguindo num hotel cheio de armadilhas é de dar um certo medo sim... (Pelo menos para mim kkkkkk) e mais bizarro quando é baseado em algo real. Nesse último capítulo da Dark Pictures nós vamos para o Hotel do primeiro Serial Killer dos Estados Unidos fazer um documentário e obviamente da tudo errado!
A Supermassive se esforçou um pouquinho mais nesse jogo dos os outros que ela lançou. Agora temos mecânicas que não mudam muita coisa, mas deixa a gameplay mais "viva". Os personagens agora tem inventários, podem fazer certas ações como pular de lugares para outros, se esgueirar, empurrar objetos para ter acesso a novas áreas e outras coisas, além que cada personagem dos 5 tem alguns itens especiais que dão mais personalidade para os personagens, e isso eu achei bem legal! Os personagens são até que bem legais e eu gosto de todos e consegui salvar todos (não sei como kkkkk) e também salvei o cachorro! A história é bem interessante, tem as pistas que vão se ligando, nós temos surpresas, um vilão maldoso, nós temos várias armadilhas e decisões difíceis e muita perseguição! Eu me diverti jogando esse jogo e para mim isso é tudo
A Supermassive se esforçou um pouquinho mais nesse jogo dos os outros que ela lançou. Agora temos mecânicas que não mudam muita coisa, mas deixa a gameplay mais "viva". Os personagens agora tem inventários, podem fazer certas ações como pular de lugares para outros, se esgueirar, empurrar objetos para ter acesso a novas áreas e outras coisas, além que cada personagem dos 5 tem alguns itens especiais que dão mais personalidade para os personagens, e isso eu achei bem legal! Os personagens são até que bem legais e eu gosto de todos e consegui salvar todos (não sei como kkkkk) e também salvei o cachorro! A história é bem interessante, tem as pistas que vão se ligando, nós temos surpresas, um vilão maldoso, nós temos várias armadilhas e decisões difíceis e muita perseguição! Eu me diverti jogando esse jogo e para mim isso é tudo
По началу было кринжово, казалось намечается чисто какая-то повесточка, но потом игра разогналась и пошел добротный такой слэшер с вайбами Пилы, Коллекционера и Хэллоуина даже. За сюжетом было следить интересно, и самостоятельно гадать над личностью антагониста, хоть игра и такое ощущение не дает окончательного конкретного ответа. Концовка истории конечно не такой ахуй как в Little Hope, который я проходил ранее, но все равно остались сугубо приятные ощущения. Понравилось, что тут геймплейные моменты расширили и эта часть стала более иммерсивной, и исследовать локации стало интереснее из-за необходимости решать небольшие простенькие головоломки. Ещё отнес бы к плюсам повышенную сложность на фоне других частей, в которые я играл. Тут сохранить всех в живых намного сложнее, чем в том же Little Hope, где я потерял только одного перса. Короче игра все ещё кайфовый кинчик, который особенно раскрывается если играть с друзьями.
Concept is cool, but wish it delved more into the Saw-esque elements. Shame there weren’t more traps, we really need a new Saw game. Game is also fairly short and the ending I got was incredibly anticlimactic. Decent enough for a one time play through, but I’m not sure if there’s enough here to warrant a second play through even if you’d get a slightly different story.
Great atmosphere. Wish they'd introduce combat mechanics like other survival horror games. Without them, it feels like it's more a walking simulator than anything else. A really well done one, mind you -- I appreciate the clues and butterfly effect choice system, but it could use some decent puzzles and combat. Their stories are usually good and characters, atmosphere, voice acting, and vibes are top notch. Just another pretty fun game from Supermassive Games.
I believe Devil in Me is the weakest of the series. While having interesting ideas for the antagonist and very cool traps it all boils down to an episode of Scooby Doo that just isn't what I had in mind when going into a ''scary'' game. The new mechanics feel fresh but its an addition that could use some improvements.
A pegada do enredo ser formado em volta de um serial-killer me agradou muito pois o tema me atrai,
os pontos negativos sao otimizaçao e modelos de personagem que são claramente uns mais bem feitos do que outros, em expressão facial principalmente.
Ponto positivo pro co-op e das novas possibilidades da gameplay de cada personagem que são muito interessantes
os pontos negativos sao otimizaçao e modelos de personagem que são claramente uns mais bem feitos do que outros, em expressão facial principalmente.
Ponto positivo pro co-op e das novas possibilidades da gameplay de cada personagem que são muito interessantes
This review contains spoilers
i was expecting a bit more going into this game, as i’d seen little hope and man of medan and knew they weren’t great instalments, so i had semi high hopes for the devil in me. i found that the opening was very strong, i loved the use of the animatronics and finding out du’met wasn’t who he said he was, but after about 4 hours it is simply just walking around and then conveniently finding yourself in a trap, getting out or killing a character, then walking around again.
i was initially scared whilst playing this game (i’m quite jumpy) but the more i played it the less on edge i became, simply because things were getting predictable. the cast was okay, i didn’t namely dislike anyone but i didn’t have strong feelings towards them either, except maybe erin and jamie.
i loved the story about sherman and munday and the use of the tape recordings however i thought that it was told too subtly, one missed secret item and you could miss a whole chunk of the subplot. i found du’met as a villain intimidating to begin with, but again after several hours you just expect him to pop up out of nowhere, unfortunately he is a villain that is seemingly immortal, which i found irritating after many times he could’ve died. i wanted more personality of his, and i wanted it shown, not through collectibles found but through him actually talking or even showing his face.
another thing that broke the immersion for me was the implementation of the mechanics, such as the “balance” feature or the characters using their “gadgets”, it just immediately took me out of the experience.
after finishing the game i felt that nothing had really happened, i didn’t feel particularly accomplished or anything, and i was annoyed as i had killed mark right at the last second on the boat. loved the addition of the dog though, big up connie.
all in all, the devil in me had a great opening and build up but it all fell flat once you get halfway through the game, most of the gameplay is characters walking around and random QTEs which can so easily get your characters killed. i wish the story was told more boldly instead of having to read through the lines. a decent instalment to the dark pictures anthology (better than little hope or man of medan due to the actual real villain) but i won’t be replaying.
i was initially scared whilst playing this game (i’m quite jumpy) but the more i played it the less on edge i became, simply because things were getting predictable. the cast was okay, i didn’t namely dislike anyone but i didn’t have strong feelings towards them either, except maybe erin and jamie.
i loved the story about sherman and munday and the use of the tape recordings however i thought that it was told too subtly, one missed secret item and you could miss a whole chunk of the subplot. i found du’met as a villain intimidating to begin with, but again after several hours you just expect him to pop up out of nowhere, unfortunately he is a villain that is seemingly immortal, which i found irritating after many times he could’ve died. i wanted more personality of his, and i wanted it shown, not through collectibles found but through him actually talking or even showing his face.
another thing that broke the immersion for me was the implementation of the mechanics, such as the “balance” feature or the characters using their “gadgets”, it just immediately took me out of the experience.
after finishing the game i felt that nothing had really happened, i didn’t feel particularly accomplished or anything, and i was annoyed as i had killed mark right at the last second on the boat. loved the addition of the dog though, big up connie.
all in all, the devil in me had a great opening and build up but it all fell flat once you get halfway through the game, most of the gameplay is characters walking around and random QTEs which can so easily get your characters killed. i wish the story was told more boldly instead of having to read through the lines. a decent instalment to the dark pictures anthology (better than little hope or man of medan due to the actual real villain) but i won’t be replaying.