Review: Oxenfree

Some months back, I watched a friend livestream Oxenfree over the course of a couple nights. I had never heard of the game beforehand, but it intrigued me. So much so, in fact, that I resolved to buy and play through the game myself, even though I’d already seen all of it via her livestream.

The title sequence in OxenfreeThe Steam summer sale provided me the perfect opportunity to finally grab Oxenfree, and having now experienced the game both first and secondhand, I will now bring you my thoughts on it.

Oxenfree is a difficult game to define. It’s part of the new generation of highly story-driven games with little to no substantive gameplay.

The story is about a small group of sometimes troubled teenagers holding a beach party on an abandoned island. The island is famous for its mysterious radio signals that seem to come from nowhere at all, and while investigating those signals, the main character (Alex) accidentally opens a bizarre rift in space.

Shenanigans ensue.

There are definite shades of Life Is Strange here, right down to having a teenage girl with blue hair, but there’s less lesbian romance and more surreal creepiness. There’s are also very strong echoes of The Secret World, especially its Halloween mission The Broadcast. Personally I think The Broadcast is one of TSW’s best moments, so any comparison to it is a very good thing.

OLLY OXENFREEIf I had to put a label on Oxenfree, I’d call it horror, but it doesn’t fit any genre particularly well. It’s closest to horror, but it’s not a particularly scary game, really. Don’t expect to be jumping in your seat or yelping in terror. It’s more strange and creepy than genuinely frightening.

The graphics are unusual, but interesting. I’m normally not a fan of the whole 2.5D thing, but the art here has a really nice style to it, and overall Oxenfree is a nice game to look at, even if it was clearly done on a budget.

Taking a cue from The Secret World, Oxenfree also likes to mess with its own graphics, blurring, shifting, and turning things upside down, among other things. It helps sell the surrealism of the game quite well.

Something else Oxenfree shares with TSW is fantastic sound design. The soundtrack is very ambient but sells the spooky atmosphere excellently, and the sound effects and voice acting are strong.

One thing I couldn’t see from watching my friend’s livestream is that Oxenfree’s gameplay has some minor hiccups, though nothing too frustrating. Movement, for example, can be a little finicky. Alex doesn’t handle corners very well.

A photo of Jonas and Alex in OxenfreeSomewhat more troublesome is that your dialogue choices have a tendency to time out, sometimes very quickly. In a story-driven game, that can get irritating. I’m used to Bioware dialogue wheels, where you can puzzle over what to say for as long as you like.

Oxenfree offers a lot of choices to the player, but they don’t seem to matter very much. I made a lot of different choices from my friend, but the end results seemed to be almost entirely the same. You can get slightly different endings, but that’s about it.

Ultimately a game like Oxenfree lives or dies by the strength of its story, and the good news is Oxenfree’s storytelling is quite strong. It’s a very surreal experience, but it’s fascinating and compelling in its oddness, and the ambiance is, again, excellent.

It doesn’t have quite the same emotional punch of Life Is Strange, but that might be a good thing. Life Is Strange got a bit over the top after a while. To put it mildly.

The consensus seems to be that all of Oxenfree’s characters are likable except one, but not everyone agrees on who the exception is. My friend hated Clarissa, but I like her just fine. It’s Ren I can’t stand.

Anyway, the point is Oxenfree’s cast is pretty strong.

Dialogue options in OxenfreeThe one significant gripe I’d have with Oxenfree is its recently added new game plus mode (for lack of a better term). You can now replay the game for a slightly different experience with some new or modified scenes and an extended ending.

It’s a free update, which is nice, but it doesn’t really change much, so mostly you’re just playing the same stuff all over again. And while the new ending is theoretically more conclusive, I honestly liked the original ending better.

It’s hard to explain without going into major spoiler territory, but basically they solved one problem by creating a bunch of new ones and kind of invalidating the rest of the game. It feels like adding something just for the sake of being able to say they added something. I think I’m going to recommend just skipping the new game plus mode entirely.

But the base game is great.

Overall rating: 8.7/10

Review: Dark Matter, “Welcome to Your New Home”

It seems Space is no longer putting up Dark Matter episodes on its website. That or they’re just being exceptionally slow, but I wasn’t willing to wait. To make a long story short, I had to download iTunes and watch it that way, having exhausted every other conceivable option.

The logo for Dark MatterYou made me give money to Apple, Space. I hope you’re happy with yourself.

Ugh.

That frustration aside, it gives me great pleasure to say that Dark Matter is back. Last year’s best surprise for sci-fi fans has returned with a new season — and honest to goodness episode titles.

Season two begins shortly after Six’s shocking betrayal at the end of season one. The crew of the Raza has been captured by the Galactic Authority, and their ship impounded.

Two, Three, and Four are thrown into the galaxy’s highest security prison, where their brutal inmates and corrupt guards soon make life a living Hell.

One, being a member of the privileged elite*, manages to get off scot-free and proceeds to begin looking into the truth behind the murder of his wife.

*(Hmm, I wonder if him being One is meant to be a play on the idea of the “one percent”? How did I not think of that before now?)

The crew of the Raza is inducted into prison in the season two openingThe android I have unilaterally decided to name Sally is interrogated, but offers nothing but history’s most well-mannered defiance. Go Sally.

Five is caught in limbo. There’s not much legal ground to hold her, but she knows far too much for the GA to let her go free. Also, apparently her real name is Emily, which makes this the second recent sci-fi series where my favourite character has been named Emily and continues my streak of positive associations with the name.

Finally, the man formerly known as Six desperately tries to convince himself he’s done the right thing, even in spite of ever-mounting evidence to the contrary.

The thing I like about Dark Matter is how consistent it is. You can always count on it to provide an hour (well, forty-odd minutes) of pure entertainment, and “Welcome to Your New Home” is no exception. Action, suspense, mystery, emotion, character development — the season premiere has it all.

And in the finest tradition of Dark Matter, there’s one Hell of a twist at the end.

I’ve heard it said that this season will focus more on world-building and exploring the geopolitical (astropolitical?) intrigues in the Dark Matter universe, and you can already see some hints of that in the premiere. Even as the crew struggles to survive prison, there are clues of something greater at work behind the scenes.

The Hyperion VIII prison in Dark MatterSeason one had a laser focus on the characters, so we didn’t learn very much about the greater setting. It will be interesting to see the show’s mythology expand.

My only complaints about this episode are incredibly minor. It seemed a bit odd to me that One didn’t seem to put any effort into helping his friends. I realize there likely wasn’t much he could do, but for all his flaws, he doesn’t strike me as the sort to give up without a fight. I could see him abandoning Four and Three to their fate, but not Two.

I also would have liked to see the characters take Six to task a little more for what he’s done. Five yelling at him was nice; I wanted to see more of that. He was pretty much the only person on the Raza who was on good terms with everyone. He is the last person anyone expected to turn coat. That should have cut the other characters deep, and we just don’t see that.

Also, more of Sally being awesome, please.

But it’s still a great episode either way.

One other thing worth noting is that “Welcome to Your New Home” has appearances by some memorable sci-fi veterans. Mike Dopud, who played Varro on Stargate: Universe, appears as a gang leader, and Trenna Keating — better known as Meh Yewll to Defiance fans — plays One’s lawyer.

Overall rating: 8.2/10 Damn, I have to wait a whole week to watch the next one.