Review: Defiance, “Bottom of the World” + Heroes of the Storm Alpha

Well, this was unexpected.

The opposing team in the tutorial for Heroes of the StormAfter months of waiting and more or less giving up on being able to play Heroes of the Storm before the hypothetical open beta, imagine my surprise when a big cheery email in my inbox declared I had been invited to the technical alpha. I checked my Battle.net account, and sure enough, it was legit.

That more or less demolished any chance I had of being productive that day.

It’s too early to have any really detailed thoughts, and I can’t say whether or not this game will hold my interest over a long term — historically, competitive gaming has not been my cup of tea. But I do feel confident in saying that I think Blizzard has another smash hit on their hands.

This game is addictive. Fiendishly, obscenely addictive. It’s similar to Hearthstone in that the learning curve is virtually nonexistent, and in stark contrast to DotA 2, it is incredibly fast-paced and action-packed from beginning to end.

Overall, Heroes of the Storm seems to be exactly what Blizzard was shooting for: a simple, low stress brawler full of action and excitement.

It’s running pretty smoothly for an alpha, too. The servers get jiggy with it now and then, and I sometimes get kicked from the queue for no apparent reason, but the gameplay is surprisingly polished.

Fighting plant horrors in the Garden of Terror in Heroes of the StormSomething that surprised me was how satisfying the versus coop versus AI option is. The humans still win most of the time, but at least you have to work for it. Normally versus AI options in games like this are exceedingly easy and play nothing like a real game, but the AI does a decent job of replicating humans. This could be a viable option for when you don’t feel up to PvP.

I also enjoy that they did attempt to include something resembling a story in the game, mainly in the tutorial. It’s completely goofy and ridiculous, but that’s what makes it endearing.

Another nice touch is how the various heroes will chat and call out to each other throughout the battles. And the repeat click Easter eggs from Blizzard’s RTS games are back with a vengeance.

Unfortunately, the characters I’m most interested in (mainly Nova and Tyrande) are not available for free this week, but I’ve been sampling what there is. Most of my time is going to Valla and Malfurion. Sonya was also surprisingly fun, though I’m not a fan of playing melee in a game like this.

Valla, in particular, is a hero I would recommend to newcomers. She’s very forgiving, but she has the potential to be quite deadly.

A large battle in the Heroes of the Storm tutorialI’m still in the honeymoon phase with the game, so take this with a grain of salt, but right now, Heroes of the Storm is exceeding my expectations.

Review: Defiance, “Bottom of the World”:

One day, things will start to go Rafe McCawley’s way.

Maybe.

“Bottom of the World” sees Defiance visited by an Earth Republic ambassador with whom Nolan and Amanda have been previously acquainted, much to their regret. While touring the gulanite mines with Amanda and Mayor Pottinger, the ambassador is caught in a cave-in, killing her and trapping Amanda and Pottinger.

Suspicion, of course, immediately falls on Rafe McCawley, and with his history with the E-Rep, his prospects don’t look good.

His family life is little better, as he continues to butt heads with Quentin.

Speaking of family trouble involving the McCawleys, “Bottom of the World” also sees Alak attempting to mend fences with Christie, but his spurned mistress is making things complicated there.

A promotional image for DefianceFinally, Irisa attempts to steal a powerful piece of Ark tech from the Earth Republic as part of her “pilgrimage.”

This is a very busy episode, but that’s a good thing, as not every plot is all that interesting. This was very nearly just a filler episode, but it advances enough storylines to still feel meaningful.

The biggest weakness of the episode is the main plot with Amanda and Pottinger trapped in the mine. It’s not bad, but it’s very generic. It’s exactly the sort of race against time to pull off a daring rescue that we’ve all seen a thousand times before on other shows.

It also has the least relevance to the show’s ongoing arc of everything in “Bottom of the World.” It does advance the relationships of Amanda and Pottinger as well as Nolan and Berlin, but it’s nothing Earth-shattering. No pun intended.

Rafe’s story was a bit more interesting. Mostly because Rafe is always awesome in everything he does.

I really do hope things take a turn for the better with him at some point. I don’t think anyone on this show has been through quite as much Hell as him — except maybe Amanda — and while Rafe is no saint, he is less deserving of misery than most of Defiance’s other residents.

Graham Greene as Rafe McCawley in DefianceI’m not sure how I feel about Quentin right now. I can totally see where he’s coming from, but he is being much more of a prick than he needs to be.

The ongoing saga of Alak and Christie is something I’m a little mixed on. I still think Christie’s as interesting as watching paint dry, and it’s getting rather painful to see Alak continue to shoot himself in the foot over and over again.

But now that Stahma is involved… this could be going places.

By far the most interesting part of this episode was the ongoing saga of Irisa and her “divine” mission. I may not be the biggest fan of Irisa’s character, but I am very interested in learning about whatever alien tech voodoo she’s unleashing.

We still don’t really know what’s going on, but whatever “Irzu” has planned, it seems to be about to come to fruition.

Arkfall transformed the Earth into an entirely new world. What will Arkrise do?

Overall rating: 7.5/10

Retro Review: Continuum Season Two, Episodes 1-5

My binge watch of Continuum continues. The first season is now behind us, and it’s on to season two.

The official logo for ContinuumYou know the drill by now: truncated reviews and more than a few spoilers.

“Second Chances”:

The first episode of Continuum’s second season takes place a week after the events of “Endtimes.” Kiera has gone a little rogue following the blast, Alec appears to have had a minor breakdown after reading the message from his future self, and Sonya has succeeded in her coup of Liber8 — though her authority doesn’t seem absolute.

Things get moving again when the mayor of Vancouver is assassinated in broad daylight. Kiera has to get back into the saddle to investigate Liber8’s connection to the crime.

The thing I found odd about this episode is that it feels like much more than a week has passed. Many characters have visibly aged, and almost all of them have changed their look in some way.

I know there was actually a gap of likely several months to a year or more between filming the first season and the second, but they could have done a better job disguising the fact. Would it have been so hard to give Carlos the same haircut?

Even a lot of the characters’ personalities feel as if they’ve grown and evolved more than a week can account for.

Rachel Nichols as Kiera Cameron in ContinuumThe reveal of future Alec’s message was also a bit of an anticlimax after so much build-up. We still don’t know why he did what he did, or why Kiera was involved, or what present Alec is supposed to do…

With that being said, the investigation into the mayor’s death was pretty entertaining, and on the whole, this was a decent episode. I just expected better.

Overall rating: 7.1/10

“Split Second”:

The season two premiere may have left me a little underwhelmed, but it didn’t take long for them to get back into the swing of things.

“Split Second” focuses on an attempt to transfer Travis between prisons after he proves disruptive (to put it mildly) in the general prison population. But a simple prisoner transfer turns out to be anything but.

Meanwhile, Kellogg and Alec cross paths for the first time. Awesome ensues.

As I’ve come to expect from Continuum, there was no shortage of action and excitement in this episode. The chase through the wilderness was amazingly lavish and well-executed for a TV show, let alone a Canadian one.

A wallpaper featuring propaganda for Liber8It was also a bit less straight forward than Continuum usually is — in a good way. “Split Second” had quite a few twists, and it kept me guessing a fair bit.

I very much like the possibilities presented by this episode going forward. Everything seems to be falling to chaos in an interesting way. Kiera and Gardner are both trying to convince everyone the other is a Liber8 spy, and Liber8 has been split down the middle between the somewhat crazy terrorists, and the really crazy terrorists.

While I don’t expect this to happen soon, I think this could open the door to Sonya and Lucas winding up on Kiera’s side, or at least in a semi-neutral status a la Kellogg. Of all the people in Liber8, Sonya seems the most pure of intention. She’s a true believer in the cause, whereas Travis and Garza come across as psychopaths who hide behind ideals to justify their brutality.

And seriously, the subplot with Kellogg and Alec was brilliant.

Overall rating: 8.1/10

“Second Thoughts”:

It’s still early going, but so far I’m starting to feel like the second season of Continuum may be an improvement over the first.

“Second Thoughts” has all the fast pacing and intensity I expect from Continuum, but it’s not quite so straight forward. It’s quite a complicated plot with a lot going on, and some pretty crazy revelations.

Kiera, Alec, and Carlos in ContinuumThe main plot of the episode deals with the escalating conflict between Travis and Sonya. They have made tools of Vancouver’s criminal underground, sparking a gang war that quickly sees the body count climbing. Sonya has bought their loyalty with a drug from the future, Flash, that allows people to relive memories with perfect clarity,* causing yet more chaos.

*(Reminds me…)

Alec continues to struggle to find his path after the revelations from the future. He is tempted by both Kellogg’s offer, and by what Flash offers.

And as if all that wasn’t interesting enough, Jason is back and filled with paranoia that the Freelancers are after him.

Pretty much the whole episode was great, really. I enjoyed seeing Sonya’s character finally get some serious development. My read on her as a misguided idealist seems to have been accurate. Unfortunately, I don’t think her ideals are going to end well for her.

News of the Freelancers is welcome, even if we didn’t learn much.

Alec’s plot might have been the most interesting, though. Jason is his father? Wow, did not see that coming.

Also, I was quite glad to see Magda Apanowicz again, even if she hasn’t had any dialogue yet. She’s a very talented actress, and I’m sure her presence can only enrich this show.

Magda Apanowicz as Emily in ContinuumShe looks surprisingly good with red hair.

My one complaint would be that it seemed a bit weird to only now be learning about Kiera’s junkie sister. That seems like the sort of thing that should have come up before now.

Overall rating: 8/10

“Second Skin”:

This episode features Kiera learning of another traveler from her own time: Her partner on the future police force. But she was thrown back much further in time, to the 1970s, and is now an old woman suffering from dementia.

Their reunion stirs up a great deal of emotion for Kiera, but she has little time to dwell on her memories. Her partner’s combat suit was sold at a garage sale by her son, who knew nothing of its power. Kiera and both factions of Liber8 rush to find it, but it has already been put to use by its new owner: a random nerd who got it for sci-fi themed wedding. Once he figures out that the suit makes him nearly indestructible, he does what any self-respecting nerd would in that situation: He decides to become a super hero.

Of course, chaos ensues.

“Second Skin” doesn’t do a huge amount to advance the main plot, and it isn’t on the same level of quality as the previous two episodes, but I still enjoyed it a lot. It had lots of excitement, and a decent emotional punch, too.

The cast of ContinuumIf I had one complaint, I would have liked a clearer resolution to the story of the poor shmuck who found the suit. I was actually rather enjoying see his arc unfold. For just a minor bit character, they managed to make him feel pretty fleshed out.

Overall rating: 7.8/10

“Second Opinion”:

Kiera is having a bad day. It’s her son’s birthday… or at least it will be, several decades into the future. This makes her sense of loss over being separated from her family cut much more keenly than usual. To make matters worse, the chief of police is fired, and the entire department find itself being investigated under suspicion of housing a Liber8 mole.

It’s all too much for Kiera, who goes off the deep end a little bit. Aside from putting her under even more scrutiny than she already was, this triggers an emergency psychiatric treatment program hidden in her software — played by Alessandro Juliani, AKA Felix Gaeta on Battlestar Galactica. If it can’t be satisfied of her mental health in an hour, it will erase her memories.

If you’ve ever wrestled with an automated phone directory, you have an idea of how well an automated shrink works.

The problem with this episode is that it focuses almost entirely on Kiera’s internal struggles, and Rachel Nichols just doesn’t have the acting chops for it. She’s good at playing the superhero; she does cool, confident, and smug very well. What she isn’t so good at is coming across as a three-dimensional human being, and “Second Opinion” is an episode devoted almost entirely to humanizing Kiera.

Rachel Nichols as Kiera Cameron in ContinuumIt was also a bit distracting that Kiera apparently hasn’t grasped that because she’s in the past, her son isn’t necessarily missing her. If she ever does find a way back, she could, theoretically, reappear in the future mere moments after she left. So all her hand-wringing over how he must go to bed every night wondering what happened to her doesn’t really have the impact it was probably meant to.

To be fair, Kiera’s grief over being cut off from her family is something that needed to be addressed sooner or later. It is an important part of her character. But it’s just not a story that plays to Continuum’s strengths, and prior to now, Continuum has been very good about sticking to what it does well and not wasting time on anything else.

Overall rating: 6.9/10