This was a surprising game for me in many ways. The game starts out in a decently atmospheric intro level where you find yourself escaping a crashed prison spaceship, lacking weapons, can read logs and notes from all the dead people and abandoned computers around you and get the chance to pick up the pieces to get some context for the story. Eventually when stepping out into the planet, the gigantic scale of the map, the ambient sounds coming from the animals and environment and the sense of exploration were incredible.

Many maps in this game have an incredible scale for 1998, and even when things are crude, a lot of thought goes into the world building be it through readable logs or simply environmental details. You could call the visuals outdated, but I find that they're artistically used very well to convey the environment so that I could keep myself immersed even when details are lacking, especially thanks to some great use of lighting effects. Some of the scenes visible in this game are simply unbelievable to me and I can't imagine what seeing them in a period accurate PC at the time would have been like.

Combat is certainly an aspect that will put a lot of people off, they focused on building an AI system that would give enemies the ability to navigate maps extensively, dodge your attacks and even have some types use a variety of weapons. I'm guessing that due to optimization, they kept combat spaces to very few enemies at a time which does mean enemies are designed around being a bit tanky so you often have a dynamic 1v1 encounter. When it works it's pretty fine, if a bit slower paced than other games in the genre at the time, but when it doesn't work it feels like enemies are either always dodging or getting lost, with the level design in later areas not helping much as it gets more mazey.

And this is where the game fell out of legendary status for me, the jank felt pretty justifiable given its age and how much it accomplished at the time a mere 5 months after Quake II had tried to do a lot of it and didn't quite reach, but the final 2 chapters are extremely tedious. Level design goes from trying to immerse into big open maps that lead you to smaller places you can explore to being very mazey and in some cases a messy kind of symmetrical, with very strange design choices like waiting for 2 enemies to constantly spawn after being killed until they spawn behind a door, with no indication, so that door finally opens and you can proceed. Already I felt like the game was simply stretching thin before this as it ran out of weapons and enemies to introduce, but the final chapter had me WISHING the game ended in every single map I had to go through. It didn't help that boss fights are the typical FPS trope of shoot at it until it dies.

I don't mind Half-Life Xen as much as other people do, I find it kinda boring but not frustrating. The final chapter of Unreal was frustating for me, not because it had weird gravity gimmicks or because I died much or anything of the sort, but because the levels and enemy encounters were really unengaging and uninteresting at that point. As even story logs became rare, I felt like the game should have ended 2 or 3 hours ago already. I do not think getting bang for your buck in game length is worth it if the game isn't offering more fun, just more filler. At the very least Xen was filled with interesting ideas and Half-Life wasn't as long.

Still with the problems I had at the end I'm very glad I played this, I still find it an impressive title full of memorable places to explore and a surprisingly thought out world. I just wish it wasn't stretched so much at the end, but regardless, it is a good game and it's a shame that Epic cannot see it for what it is and would rather delist it because they refuse to provide support the community is more than happy to do for them, even while being unpaid.

Reviewed on Aug 28, 2023


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