Unknown 9: Awakening Review

Unknown 9: Awakening first came to my attention when I saw the trailer at Summer Games Fest while waiting for the New World: Aeternum announcement. It looked interesting, but I would come to find the buzz around the game was very negative.

Performing a stealth takedown in Unknown 9: Awakening.Because we live in the worst timeline, the overwhelming majority of this was people having meltdowns over the fact the protagonist is an Indian woman. But in amongst all the weirdos wetting their pants in terror over being reminded that brown people exist, there were some legitimate concerns about what seemed to be some fairly janky gameplay.

Overall, it seemed like the sort of ambitious yet messy double-A title that usually proves a commercial failure but which I often end up enjoying, and in the end, that’s more or less what it was.

Unknown 9: Awakening is a highly linear action game set in the early 20th century. You play as Haroona. Haroona is a quaestor, a kind of supernatural investigator who can access an alternate dimension known as the Fold. This grants her a variety of psychic and telekinetic powers that are crucial to both the story and the gameplay. Haroona finds herself caught up in a civil war between different factions of a secret society, and looming over it all is the legacy of the Unknown 9, a group of immortal once-humans who seek to halt the cycles of destruction that have dogged the human race since long before the history that we know.

Definitely there are problems with this game. My biggest disappointment with U9A was the story, despite a promising start. The voice acting is pretty solid, and I think the underlying backstory around the Unknown 9 and the cycles of history is very compelling. Fans of The Secret World will find much familiar here, though the horror and Lovecraftian elements aren’t as prominent.

Ancient statues of the Unknown 9 in Unknown 9: Awakening.However, the meat and potatoes of U9A’s plot are very tropey and predictable, and I found the ending quite eye-roll worthy. There seems to be a real trend in our media these days of trying to force big character moments without doing anything to justify them. Whatever happened to “show, don’t tell”?

There’s some other, small issues with the game as well. For one thing, I regularly encountered a bug where Haroona half-fell through the floor in cutscenes, leaving close-ups to only show the top of her head. This definitely has that janky AA feel I know and have learned to live with.

However, despite how it looked in the previews I did find the core gameplay quite a strength, and that carries the game despite its other flaws.

I was concerned going that the game was going to be very stealth-heavy, and it is, but I found it didn’t bother me. The stealth mechanics are quite forgiving, and you have a lot of fun tools to let you stay one step ahead of your foes, from on-demand invisibility to the ability to see through walls by “peeking” into the Fold.

Turning enemies against each other with the stepping mechanic in Unknown 9: Awakening.What really makes this game special, though, is the stepping mechanic. Haroona has the ability to “step into” enemies, briefly possessing them. When you step into someone, the game’s action temporarily freezes, allowing you a moment to think through your next action. You can only make one attack before stepping out of an enemy, but with careful planning, that can still be devastating.

Early on, I found myself pinned down by two ranged enemies on a ledge. One was standing next to an explosive canister, but the other was a safe distance away from it. I stepped into the farther one, made him stand next to the canister, and had him fire his gun at it. When my step ended, the resulting explosion took both enemies out in an instant.

It was incredibly satisfying, and that barely scratches the surface of what you can do by stepping into enemies, especially later in the game when you can possess multiple enemies in a single stepping sequence.

It adds a very interesting new dynamic to the game because every new enemy type you encounter is not just a new challenge to overcome, but also potentially a new weapon in your arsenal. There’s nothing quite like walking into a room full of elite late game enemies and thinking, “All right, showtime!”

The aftermath of stepping into multiple enemies in Unknown 9: Awakening.There’s lots of other cool things you can do, too, like telekinetically shoving enemies off ledges to their deaths, but in the majority of cases stepping is the best choice, in terms of both power level and fun factor.

My only major criticism on the gameplay front is that the boss fights are a total letdown. They’re simple 1v1 encounters where the stealth and stepping mechanics aren’t available, so you’re playing without most of your toolkit, and there’s nothing to do but very slowly chew your way through their massive health bars between spamming the dodge and heal buttons.

The good news is that there’s very few of these encounters in the game, but it is quite the unforced error. Why not simply include some respawning waves of mooks for you to step into? Why remove all the mechanics that make your game fun and unique during its most climactic moments?

I will also note that it is a fairly short game. It took me about thirteen hours to finish it, and I’m usually slower than most people. This didn’t bother me; I rather appreciate when games don’t overstay their welcome. But I know for some people it might make them think twice about buying.

An Indian town in Unknown 9: Awakening.Taken together, Unknown 9: Awakening is a game I would recommend, but I wouldn’t blame anyone for waiting until the next Steam sale to grab a copy. It’s got some very original and enjoyable game mechanics, but it also has some very significant stumbles.

Overall rating: 7/10 Worth the price of admission for the stepping mechanic alone.

I won’t factor it into my review, but one other thing I want to mention before I go is that the creators saw this game as helping to launch a vast multimedia franchise. Given its poor reception, that plan seems unlikely to continue, but there’s already a lot of tie-in material out there, including novels, comic books, an audio drama, and a web series.

I’m on the fence as to whether I want to check this stuff out. The premise of the setting is very good, so the potential is there, but the plot of the game itself was pretty weak, which doesn’t inspire optimism. The prospect of some actually good stories in this universe remains tempting, though.

Thoughts on Star Trek: Prodigy’s Second Season

I recently got done watching the second season of Star Trek: Prodigy, the franchise’s entry into the realm of children’s cartoons. Despite my ambivalence towards kids’ media and disdain for the current direction of the franchise, the first season blew me away, and I was glad to see the show saved by Netflix after it was axed by Paramount. Given Netflix’s recent history, I’m assuming this will be the show’s final season, but we’ll see.

Promotional art for Star Trek: Prodigy season two.Unfortunately I was a bit disappointed by this season. It’s still more good than bad to be sure, but it’s definitely a more uneven experience than season one.

My biggest issue is that they went all-in on fan service this season, to a really excessive degree. To be clear, I think playing to nostalgia is a perfectly fine thing for a story to do — I’ve sunk thousands of hours into World of Warcraft almost entirely on the basis of Warcraft III nostalgia — but it has to be done the right, and anything can be toxic when taken to excess.

Prodigy’s tie-ins to other Trek shows this season are problematic both because there’s so many of them, to the point of crowding out Prodigy’s own stories, and because a lot of it feels unnecessary.

I’m a huge fan of the Doctor, so I was super hyped when I heard Robert Picardo was coming back to reprise the role, but to be honest… he didn’t really need to be there. The Doctor is clearly just there for the sake of nostalgia bait, and in nearly all of his scenes he could be replaced with any other random Starfleet officer without changing the plot in any meaningful way. There are only a handful of exceptions, such as a lovely but all too brief scene in which he bonds with Zero over their shared experiences as beings of pure energy.

Robert Picardo's The Doctor in Star Trek: Prodigy season two.By comparison, I was never that big a fan of Janeway or Chakotay, but because they’ve been woven into Prodigy’s story from the start, their presence feels earned and natural, and I ended up loving all the stories with them this season. That’s an example of nostalgia bait done the right way.

But my biggest complaint is definitely the extent to which throwbacks to the past left so little room for new stories to flourish. Given how much of the season revolves around Solum, the homeworld of the Vau N’Akat, I was super excited to learn to more about their history and culture… and we got almost none of that.

Instead it felt like fully a quarter of the season was devoted to bringing back an old face from the past that I don’t think many fans even wanted to see again. It bothers me that two seasons in we know almost nothing about Gwyn’s people and even less about Rok’s people, but they found time to devote multiple episodes to one of the franchise’s least popular characters.

I know the (star)ship sailed on this before the first season even finished, and it may not be the most popular opinion, but I think having the crew join up with the Federation so early in the series was a mistake. I loved the angle of a crew who isn’t under the direct guidance of Starfleet but is trying to live by their principles anyway because they see it’s a better way to live. It was such a great way of taking the franchise in a new direction while staying true to its roots, and I wish that had continued for longer.

A shot of the crew in Star Trek: Prodigy season two.There’s also a lot of plot holes and sloppy writing this season, both on an individual episode level and a big picture level. Bluntly, the meta plot for this season makes no sense at all. Time travel can always be a bit messy, and it’s never had a totally consistent portrayal in Star Trek, but this season manages to contradict all we’ve seen before while failing to adhere to even the most basic kind of logic.

That said, I do find this a lot more forgivable from Prodigy than it might otherwise be, thanks to the generally light-hearted tone of the show. I’ve said in the past that the problem with modern Trek is not so much that it’s super dumb, but that it doesn’t know it’s super dumb. The most ridiculous, nonsensical plots are treated with such breathless gravitas.

Prodigy doesn’t fall into that trap. It’s not pretending to be anything more than it is: a goofy pulp adventure story. So while I’d prefer something closer to the cerebral Trek of yesteryear, Prodigy failing to live up to that is merely a hiccup, not a fatal flaw.

And there are plenty of other things to like about this season. The core cast remains a delight. I love how Rok-Tahk is the living embodiment of Star Trek’s wholesomeness, and I love how Zero exemplifies the wisdom of, “Beware the just anger of a gentle heart.” There’s also a great new addition to the cast in the form of the Vulcan cadet Maj’el, and I enjoyed seeing her grow into part of the team.

Cadet Maj'el in Star Trek: Prodigy season two.Most importantly, Prodigy remains a show built on the optimism and sense of wonder at the heart of Star Trek. It is not burdened by the depressing cynicism that has defined all other modern incarnations of the franchise. Whatever other flaws it may have, this is the kind of Star Trek I loved growing up.

My favourite episode this season involved the crew setting literal sail across an alien cloud sea. It was whimsical, exciting, and just plain fun — joyful sci-fi adventure at its very best. That’s the spirit of exploration that Trek is all too often missing, especially these days, but Prodigy hasn’t forgotten what it means to boldly go.

Ultimately my complaint is not that the second season wasn’t good, but simply that it missed a lot of opportunities to be better.