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Tacoma is Immersive, but can Lose its Way in its Many Perspectives

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Tacoma is Fullbright’s second game and their second entry in the Adventure Exploration genre, a medium they helped define with their 2013 release of Gone Home. Play as Amy Ferrier, a freelance contractor hired by the Venturis Corporation to recover portions of AI data aboard the Lunar Transfer Station Tacoma. In her exploration of the station, Amy can recover crew data as well, playing recorded sequences back and forth in order to see the story from multiple perspectives.

Tacoma has six crew members to follow, each represented by a vague outline in the color of their role aboard the ship, from medical staff to engineer. Each major room she visits queues up a recorded sequence of a few minutes long, but there can be as many as four conversations being had at one time, so after listening to one story you can rewind the footage and watch things from a new angle. This gameplay mechanic is one of the highlights of Tacoma, as it provides a seamless and fluid sense of storytelling, able to revisit and re-explore each conversation as much as the player sees fit. Throughout the sequences you can also access the crew’s personal data (indicated by a time-stamp on the timeline at the bottom of the screen) which grants you access to messages between crew members, messages to friends and family earthside, and personal interests of the characters (one is in the middle of purchasing a body pillow during one sequence).

The ship’s AI, ODIN, is present in all of these scenes, over the shoulder of crew staff he’s working with. ODIN gives off the sense of omnipresence, his cool voice and quiet demeanor can lead the player to believe he had something to do with why the station is abandoned.

Warning: Full Spoilers for Tacoma Below

Amy finds out fairly early on the cause of the evacuation, a group of meteors hitting the oxygen supply. The crew quickly formulates a plan, and it does become thrilling to follow each member carry out their task, as well as confront the fact that they might not be rescued. Each worker has their own goodbyes to say, but it can become redundant to hear each of them deal with the same fears in what is basically the same way. Amy doesn’t seem to find enough about what each of them were holding on to to make each individual story mean much. For instance, are the goodbyes EV and Clive say to one another really much different than the conversation Nat and Bert have? And does the message Andrew writes to his son and husband differ that greatly from what Sareh sends to her mother? This is a game about personal moments of crisis, but the crises don’t seem very individual to each character.

The last few scenes show the game at it’s best, with Sareh rushing to ODIN’s core, and ODIN somehow being specifically vague while gently nudging her along. The player can get the sense that ODIN is using the crew to plan his own escape, but when Amy reaches his core and finds out what had actually happened, ODIN is still nuzzled safely away in containment.

The presence of a semi-dystopian corporate society is present throughout the story, with odd concepts like ‘Loyalty’ as payment prevalent in much of the information Amy can access in each room. The decision of Sergio Venturi to sacrifice the Tacoma crew to push helpful legislation (a plan formulated by an AI) is shocking, but supported well by certain details players can pick up along the way (like Nat saying in passing that no crew had ever had every member renewed for a full year). This feeling of shock is secondary to the feeling of urgency the player feels for Sareh, who is alone in ODIN’s core. Her frantic call for help after restoring communications serves as an incredible climax to the story.

Where Gone Home ended on a bittersweet note of uncertainty, Tacoma sees the bad guys beaten and every character saved. In comparing the two, a player can’t help but feel that Gone Home accomplished more with less. Many of the things that hold back Tacoma are present in Fullbright’s debut game, and many of those problems are due to the larger cast of characters and the player-character herself.

Gone Home tells a personal story for the player, even though she doesn’t influence the story. It’s addressed to the player-character, you know from the moment the game starts that she has a personal stake in the story. Tacoma, where your character actually has an effect on the greater story, doesn’t deliver that. The characters you follow have no idea you’re there, and have presumably never met you. You’re tasked with putting together the pieces of a story in a way that doesn’t work as powerfully as in Gone Home.

Now, this is not a plea for Gone Home in space. It makes sense that Amy doesn’t have any connection to any of the characters, and it makes sense that she influences more of the story than does her counterpart in Fullbright’s previous game. However, in terms of storytelling in general, there is a price to pay for when you work with as many characters as Tacoma does. In a way, you lose track of who matters.

There are only a few people you care about in Gone Home, primarily the sister, as the parents take a back seat to the narrator. The number of primary characters increases dramatically in Tacoma, but their fates are intertwined in a way that they might as well be one person. They come across as fragments of a more interesting, more conflicted single character.

ODIN can be the main character you care about, who you see getting personable with Sareh early on, and later working on this with Nat. He is the only one left on the ship after all, and it’s Amy’s job to retrieve him. There’s not much from him, however, beyond his conversations with Sareh and his nudging of Nat towards information she’s not allowed to access. But why should a player care about the AI Liberation Front, with so little information about them beyond a quick comment and a pamphlet in Nat’s room? The fact that Amy is working undercover in order to rescue ODIN from Venturis isn’t really enough to go off of. In the end, I did care about freeing ODIN, perhaps more than I cared about the other characters being saved, but it’s hard to feel Amy’s connection to the mission as such a passive character. This, obviously, is simply part of the genre, but if the game ends with the passive player-character being revealed to be much more important than she seems, it makes sense to depart a little from that standard.

It did serve as a great twist, however, in a game that can lead you to believe you might be making a choice in the end. ODIN calling out to you from the fragments of text in Amy’s AR nodes makes you think that he’s in more control than he actually is. When placing ODIN in the slot of Amy’s ship, I thought he would stop Amy and make her choose between freeing him and giving him back to Venturis, where he would almost certainly be destroyed.

ODIN’s final line “considering the alternative, I would say that I do,” gives off such a beautiful sense of human consciousness, so much so that it’s enough reason for the player to get on Amy’s side, even more so than the fact that she’s who you play as. In the end, ODIN is not analyzing or running probabilities, he’s making an unsure, resigned decision because he was pressed to make a choice. If that’s not an argument for sentience, I’m not sure what is. And that’s the dilemma Tacoma offers– the abstract idea of life and consciousness. In a world where people are valued based on their loyalty to certain corporations, what separates humans from the many AI created to help run those corporations? ODIN may not have the sad backstories or families waiting for him back on earth like the other crewmembers do, but he forms real connections with the crew, and while he is forced to cut off oxygen and communications by Venturis, he circumvents his own programming through logic loopholes to help rescue the endangered crew. Knowing this, ODIN would have to be considered alive, at the very least more so than the cat (wonderfully named Margaret Catwood) that can be found lazing around the many rooms of the ship.

Tacoma does what it set out to do, tell a multi-layered, multi-perspective story about the pitfalls of capitalist greed and the abstractions of human consciousness. This game is definitely not for everyone. It rewards those who can easily lose themselves in other worlds, so this is certainly a game for players who search every corner of every room they enter. While not the strongest entry in the genre and overshadowed by Gone Home, Tacoma brings a new kind of storytelling to video games. At times it can feel like you’re simply watching a movie, but the perspective-based story offers something you cannot find in a theater, and can only be found in a game such as this.

Tacoma’s main drawback is it’s time and cost, priced at $20 for about 3 hours of gameplay. Still it’s hard not to recommend a game like Tacoma, whose space station I lost myself in for the better part of a Friday night. I’d suggest waiting for a steam sale to pick it up for cheaper, but it’s definitely a game to keep on your list.

Stray thoughts:

Sareh’s backstory was the strongest of the bunch, her involvement in the death of a popular travel writer by fault of the Venturis Company’s AI, and the company’s pressuring of her to take the blame (which she declines) makes her decision to put Nat in Cryo even with such low chances of survival that much more powerful.

Minny, Amy’s ship’s onboard AI, is so charming and vibrant of a character, it’s a shame she’s only in the beginning and end in a minor role.

Like Gone Home, there are a bunch of fun mini-games and Easter eggs, like zero-g basketball and reuniting two cleaning drone lovers named Romeo and Juliet.

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Helldivers 2 has quickly become one of Sony’s top-selling games in the US

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Helldivers 2 proved to be a surprising success, highlighting the unpredictable nature of the gaming industry. As per Circana analyst Mat Piscatella, it currently ranks as Sony’s seventh highest grossing game in the United States to date, trailing behind a trio of Spider-Man titles, a couple of God of War games, and Ghost of Tsushima. It’s only been on the market for less than three months and is not even being sold at full price.

According to Piscatella, a significant factor contributing to the game’s success is its release on PC. He mentioned that, based on Circana’s Player Engagement Tracker, the game has consistently ranked first in terms of active users on Steam in the US since its launch, including April. The release of Helldivers 2 on both PlayStation and PC has been an extraordinary triumph.

He stated that Helldivers 2 has already become the seventh highest-grossing Sony-published game in history. Without a PC, it would not currently be considered one of the top 20 games. While I’m emphasizing the success of the PC SKU, it’s important to note that I’m not disregarding the success of the PlayStation SKU. I just wanted to clarify that. This launch has proven to be incredibly successful.

Prior to the release of Helldivers 2, Sony made it clear that they would be launching their live service-style titles simultaneously on both the PS5 and PC. The success of this approach will undoubtedly strengthen their strategic vision. It will be intriguing to witness if the company reveals official sales figures in the near future, as the title appears to be one of the platform holder’s most successful sellers to date.

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The developer of Stellar Blade for the PS5 Expressing gratitude to the fans for their unwavering support amidst a recent controversy surrounding censorship

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Shift Up, the Korean developer, seems to be reconsidering its contentious alterations to the Stellar Blade outfit. In a message to fans, they have urged everyone to stay tuned for updates and expressed gratitude for the passionate feedback from players. For those who may not be aware, a petition gained significant attention over the weekend when gamers discovered changes made to a few of the game’s costumes through a day-one patch.

The launch day update includes a fantastic New Game + mode, but some players were disappointed by the changes made to protagonist Eve’s outfit. These alterations sparked debates about censorship. Director Hyung-Tae Kim later clarified that this was the studio’s original vision, but he acknowledged that it may require further persuasion to win over users. Internal discussions were also underway to address any concerns.

There is no definitive confirmation regarding the reversal of the outfits, but considering the language used in the statement and the widespread controversy surrounding the alterations, it is highly likely that a future patch will restore the original costumes. If you want to get a sneak peek at all of Eve’s different outfits and learn how to unlock them, be sure to take a look at our comprehensive guide, All Outfits and How to Get Them.

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Will Stellar Blade be available for PC?

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It’s quite possible. Fans all over the world are interested in Shift Up’s highly anticipated action-adventure game, Stellar Blade. With its captivating post-apocalyptic setting reminiscent of Nier and a compelling protagonist named Eve, it’s no wonder the game has generated such widespread attention.

The game consistently impresses with its stunning visuals and high-octane action, leaving players in awe with each new trailer.

Yet, just like other noteworthy second-party and third-party game releases, fans are pondering: Will Stellar Blade be available on PC?

In this article, we delve into the details to determine the platform availability of the highly anticipated title.

Will Stellar Blade be available on PC? Allow me to provide you with the answer.

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Unfortunately, Stellar Blade will not be available on PC, at least not initially. Currently, the game is only available on PlayStation 5 starting on April 26, 2024.

Regrettably, it appears that there is no indication of a potential PC release for Stellar Blade in the future. In most cases, trailers for PlayStation timed-exclusive titles conclude with a disclaimer that specifies the duration of their exclusivity.

In the Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth launch trailer, it is explicitly stated that the game will only be accessible on other platforms starting on May 29, 2024.

Regrettably, when it comes to the stellar blade, there is no indication of such.

It’s important to note that Sony Entertainment Interactive published Stellar Blade, unlike Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth. This means that the chances of it being released on PC or other platforms in the near future are even slimmer.

However, it is worth noting that there is a chance the game might be released on PC in the future, given PlayStation’s track record of bringing their exclusive titles to the platform. However, it could be a while before this comes to fruition.

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