Following the release of Banjo-Tooie on the Switch Online N64 app last week, Nintendo has now added two more games to the “mature” version of this app.
Alright boys and girls, the word of the day is Omnimovement. That’s where you take a Max Payne-esque leap in any direction, guns blazing, only to land on the ground in the most dramatic way possible to minimize getting shot and maximize your aim after exposing yourself, and it’s a game-changer in Call of Duty: Black Ops 6’s multiplayer mode. Sure, we can nitpick all day at minor things other games do better, but in the face of such fun, fast, and smooth online competition, those seem insignificant. Black Ops 6 is certainly no reinvention and arguably plays it a bit too safe, but its fundamentals – moving and shooting – are at such a high level as to elevate the experience well above that of years past. I spent a couple of hundred hours grinding through the perfectly fine but not at all remarkable Modern Warfare 3, but after a few days in Black Ops 6, I can’t even imagine going back.
This isn’t the first time we’ve seen moves like this in Call of Duty, but it’s the first time the developers have embraced the technique the community invented and used to call Dolphin Diving, and they built on it with dramatic flair. I still find it a little cumbersome to execute properly with my mouse and keyboard control scheme, but I’m happy to say after my nearly 20 hours grinding out matches, I’ve already gotten much better at bursting into a room with a gun-blazing sideways leap.
Where I think Omnimovement works the absolute best, though, is when you’re moving backwards. When you dive back and hit the ground, you have the same overall target footprint as you would in the prone position, but now you have 360 degrees of aim freedom and you can both get up and move around while on the ground much more easily. When I pull any of these moves off I also congratulate myself for giving everybody else a good show, because it looks really cool from an observer’s perspective.
Crucially, though, omnimovement isn’t omnipowerful. Those online acrobatics may make for some sick clipouts, but I’m finding it pretty easy and extremely satisfying to take people out when they get overconfident and execute a flying sideways John Woo leap directly into my gunsights. In fact, if you’re playing against me I encourage you to Omnimove as much as possible.
On my end of things, I find it a little harder to aim true with an Omnimove than I do with just a simple slide or traditional dolphin dive and so I end up using those tried-and-true methods much more often. Part of that is undoubtedly muscle-memory, but for the most part I find Omnimovement to be a ridiculously cool way to get around that doesn’t necessarily help me competitively except in very specific situations. It’s another tool in the toolbox, but not the end-all-be-all.
Maps, Modes, and Gunplay
Call of Duty lives or dies by its gunplay, and Black Ops 6 is absolutely fantastic in that regard. I’ve been grinding the XM4 since launch, one of the first weapons available to you when you boot it up for the first time. It feels phenomenal to use, and since I’ve been using it for at least 80% of my matches, I have it customized to a level that has me afraid to try out any of the other assault rifles. I mean, I’m obviously going to, I gotta get those skins, but with the Gunfighter Wildcard, I now have a total of eight attachments on my XM4 and it’s an absolute beast. I do think the Gunfighter wildcard is a little too generous, but on the other hand, bow to my OP XM4. There’s almost no situation in which it doesn’t just dominate: I’m able to easily take out snipers in larger maps like Protocol while also having no problem at medium range for maps like Subsonic.
Sniper rifles are, as always, cumbersome to use but absolutely lethal in the hands of a skilled player. I am not that player, but there really is something to be said for racking up those satisfying head shots. I’m also a fan of the SMGs, although I’ve only just started on those. I’ve definitely noticed how many times in any match on any map I’ve fallen to an SMG, though. They almost seem a little too powerful at medium-range.
Call of Duty lives or dies by its gunplay, and Black Ops 6 is absolutely fantastic in that regard.
I’m not really too keen on the Marksman rifles this year, but I’m sure that will change as I open up more attachments. I’ve always loved a good Marksman rifle, especially the KAR98K from previous Call of Duty games. It’s the lethality of a sniper rifle with the handling of an assault rifle. I’ve never really liked shotguns or LMGs, but in modes like Gunfight where I don’t have a choice, I’m totally fine with them. Just not a gun category I’m really interested in other than fulfilling higher-level skin unlock requirements.
I also like how the perks work this year. If you equip three from the same category, you’re given a special fourth perk. My favorite is rocking a full Recon build, because it briefly exposes enemy positions when you spawn, giving you an edge on the smaller and even medium sized maps.
Maps like Rewind and SCUD, which I thought were just okay during the beta, are now among my favorites thanks to how well you can move and shoot your way through them. Rewind has a perfect mix of long corridors and close-quarter interiors, and SCUD has some of the best sniper lanes in the current crop of launch maps.
It feels like the maps were designed around different load-outs, with larger ones like the aforementioned SCUD and the island-based Protocol having excellent sniping spots while also working well with medium and even short-range guns. You have your long, open lanes with plenty of windows and balconies to perch your glinting sniper scope, but there are also tunnels, building interiors, and obstructions that invite you to play with other guns. It’s great because you don’t end up with teams made up primarily of snipers plunking one another from across the maps. Smaller maps, like Payback, lend themselves extremely well to the medium and short-range weapons and Payback in particular is absolute chaotic fun for objective-based modes like Headquarters and Control. The cramped quarters, ample angles, and multiple levels with such a small footprint means tons of chaos and carnage all happening quickly, as you’re constantly running into enemy players at every turn.
Subsonic, a small-ish map set in a stealth aircraft hangar, has one of my favorite features in any of the maps: a hangar bay door that opens and closes during the course of the match. This one little idea completely changes up how you have to approach the onslaught in objective-based modes throughout the match, and I love that it forces you to switch up your strategy on the fly. You really have to use both tactical and strategic-based thinking and it’s awesome.
There isn’t a single one of the 16 maps I don’t enjoy loading into.
I’m actually at a loss to name my least-favorite map, because there isn’t a single one out of the 16 total that are here I don’t enjoy loading into. Red Card, a large map outside a soccer stadium, is maybe the only one I have a bone to pick with, but that’s entirely because you can’t actually run out onto the pitch and shoot each other. That just seems like a missed opportunity. But otherwise it has a lot of variety, making it a great map for almost any type of loadout.
I’m a little bummed out that the modes present are really nothing new. It makes me realize that the last really cool new multiplayer mode in a Call of Duty was Champion Hill in Vanguard back in 2021, and weirdly that hasn’t been seen or iterated on since. I would have loved to see something novel and new to discover, but Treyarch plays it safe with a standard set of modes like Team Deathmatch, Control, and Kill Confirmed.
The newest idea is Kill Order, a spin on VIP modes where one member of each team is designated as a High Value Target. It’s pretty fun when you play with friends, but otherwise everyone just runs off and acts like it’s Team Deathmatch, completely ignoring the objective to protect the HVT. That’s not to say I don’t like it, because there’s a reason this style of mode has stuck around so long, but the minor tweaks like giving the HVT more armor and a very Warzone-like chance to revive if they’re killed don’t do enough to set it apart.
My go-to mode to play with a friend is Gunfight, a 2v2 mode on extremely tiny maps. It’s a pretty simple fight to the death where everyone has the same loadout that changes between each round, so you never really know what to expect. It’s also a great mode to jump into when you only have a small window of time to play, because the matches are really fast and over quickly. By and large, though, my friends and I stick with regular modes when playing together, and I switch to hardcore Team Deathmatch and hardcore Free-for-All when I’m playing solo.
For the most part, Treyarch stuck to its promise to revamp the user interface in Call of Duty, and while I do think it’s a big improvement in areas like gunsmithing and picking which of the base game modes you want to play, it still has weird issues that caused me some frustration. The greatly improved interface of Black Ops 6 really falters when it comes to finding Hardcore games to join, though. You need to open up the mode filter menu, and then select Hardcore from there, and then filter your modes. On top of that, BLOPS 6 seems to forget I want to play Hardcore and switches me back to the regular mode – something I usually only notice when I start a match and it suddenly takes more than one bullet to down a foe, usually resulting in a kill for my opponent.
My only major complaint about Black Ops 6 is that it has resurrected weird bugs and glitches that MW3 seemed to have completely squashed. At one point I started up a match and got the XP screen telling me I’d earned negative 170,080 experience points and was now at level 1, which felt pretty harsh. That, thankfully, didn’t stick, but sometimes my friends still see that level 1 indicator over my head. I’ve also had more than one occasion where a match would end and I’d be thrown back to the launch screen for a moment, only to drop back into the lobby but without my teammates. And there was a weird bug where it showed me ‘&&,’ C# for a logical ‘AND’ operator, instead of their level. So far none of these bugs have affected my gameplay or progression, and even that awkward level 1 reset disappeared once I restarted the game (which I did immediately). However, these small bugs are happening noticeably more often than I’m accustomed to.
The Weapons Grind
One of the main reasons I play Call of Duty multiplayer so much each year is to unlock weapon skins. The non-corporeal reward of a shiny gun always spurs some sort of primitive pleasure system inside my brain into action, and I do whatever is necessary to unlock the shiniest. That can be a slog that makes me curse that part of my brain, but this year things are a little different in a way that makes me happy to indulge that compulsive behavior.
For example, they keep it simple this year, at least at first. For the XM4, get 10 headshots to unlock the first skin, then 20 to unlock the second, and so on up to 100. It’s only once you’ve done all those that you get to the more elaborate, “Kill 10 enemies with your gun shortly after sprinting” type challenges that reward you with Specialized level skins. And you know what? I’m into it. It makes the common skins feel more common and the Specialized and Mastery level skins feel more, well, specialized and masterful. Am I looking forward to having my K/D plunge because I’m chasing the weapon skin dragon instead of taking whatever kills I can get? Not really, but I much prefer having those super cool skins require a little extra work.
I’m pretty disappointed in the variety of operators and their skins so far.
In addition to the weapon skins, the usual unlocks are here: new weapon parts and slots that open up as you level each weapon, different reticles for your sights, scorestreaks, wildcards and, of course, new operators and their associated skins.
Of the scorestreaks, one of my favorites is the new Archangel missile launcher that gives you a remote-controlled missile you operate from a first-person view. It’s like the cruise missile from Call of Duties past, but with a ground launch and much more control. If you like, you can just circle around the map for a surprising amount of time, searching for that perfect kill. It’s really fun and really effective.
The Watchdog Helo is another powerful scorestreak that operates similarly to helicopters from previous Call of Duty games, but this time it marks enemy positions on the map even if it can’t take them out with its minigun. At launch, it was a little too powerful and a little too hard to shoot down, but Treyarch has already balanced it out and now I feel like it’s right on the money. It doles out serious damage, but if you’re on the receiving end you can shoot it down without it feeling like a flying bullet sponge.
That said, I’m actually pretty disappointed in the number and variety of operators and operator skins so far. I know Black Ops 6 just came out, and Activision is really good at selling cosmetic upgrades over the course of a year, but one of the best parts of MW3 multiplayer was the sheer variety and absurdity of the skins. No matter how many times I dropped into a match with someone with a Snoop Dogg skin, I still got a huge kick out of hearing “I got your six, homie,” in Snoop’s actual voice.
None of those operator skins carry over into BLOPS 6 multiplayer, and the current crop plays it pretty safe with characters from the BLOPS 6 campaign, and the more ridiculous skins like Brutus and Klaus only being available if you purchased the Vault Edition. I already miss looking around at my team and seeing Nikki Minaj, Cheech Marin, an orangutan, Michael Meyers, and Violator from Spawn ready for action. Please bring us the ridiculousness, Treyarch and Raven. I’m a simple man; That’s all I ask.
Holy moly folks, Sega actually did it. After the disappointment of Sonic Forces, the glitchy mess of Sonic Colors Ultimate, and the divisive nature of Sonic Frontiers, the publisher has delivered what is undoubtedly the very best 3D Sonic game yet with Sonic X Shadow Generations. It gracefully revisits a beloved modern classic while introducing an extra campaign that we almost dismissed as a quaint bonus, but actually wound up being the star of the show.
Since some Nintendo fans may not have experienced the console version of 2011’s Sonic Generations (with its release limited to the 3DS), the general gist is that ‘Classic’ and ‘Modern’ versions of the Blue Blur team up to take on an entity known as ‘The Time Eater’ after it merges their timelines and traps them within the mysterious ‘White Space’. The two must revisit iconic stages from the franchise’s history, with Classic Sonic zipping along a 2D plane and Modern Sonic boosting his way across 3D environments.
One forward thinking PlayStation fan has spent upwards of $2,000 on 24 years worth of PS Plus to avoid increasingly common price hikes.
Reddit user On_Reddit_In_Class said they “decided to stack PS Plus subscriptions until 2048 because of the absurd price increases the past few years.” They plan to be gaming the rest of their lives so decided it would “save a good bit of money.”
A PS Plus Essential subscription cost $79.99 per year, so 24 years worth costs $1,919.76. Then, Sony was kind enough to offer the player an 89% discount to upgrade to a Premium subscription in a bizarre loophole, charging just $199.99 instead of $1,889.75, meaning it came to $2,119.75 altogether,
While the reaction to On_Reddit_In_Class’s post was a mixture of shock and awe, there is at least some logic behind the move, assuming PlayStation Plus remains a thing into the mid 21st century. Subscription service prices are on the rise, with everything from PS Plus to Xbox Game Pass and Netflix going up.
Sony last raised the price of PS Plus in September 2023, from $59.99 to $79.99 for the most basic tier. “This price adjustment will enable us to continue bringing high-quality games and value-added benefits to your PlayStation Plus subscription service,” it said at the time.
What Remains Of Edith Finch is a very upsetting collection of interactive short stories, all devoted to the tragically short lives of a cursed family who live in a monstrous treehouse. It’s also a wonderful show of experimentation, switching genres from story to story – one minute you’re a playable bestiary on shuffle, the next you’re beheading fish in a cannery as the worktable disappears beneath your scrolling daydreams. The developer’s next project seems to be pursuing a similar balance of whimsy and darkness. It’s another anthology experience, which casts you as a field biologist studying “the strangeness of organic life”. Also, chicken-legged houses.
It’s always nice to say that a big, look-how-much-we-spent-on-pore-rendering AAA game actually runs quite well on PC, as Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 does. Unfortunately for Bl6ps, and for us, that technical success is balanced on the knife tip of some seriously overwrought infrastructure. Mainly in the form the UX nightmare that is the Call of Duty HQ launcher, as well as a meddlesome always-online requirement, itself serving a feature that doesn’t even work that well.
The Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack’s N64 library is home to a couple of weird little bugs that keep us on our toes as we play through some of the cartridge classics. Last week, we noticed a weird speed issue in the recently added Banjo-Tooie, and now we have another, this time from Super Mario 64.
As pointed out on Twitter by the fountain of all obscure Mario knowledge, @MarioBrothBlog, the European expansion pack is home to a bug that results in some weird typos on select level names.
Starting today, we are excited to announce that a new Home experience is available in the Xbox app on Windows for Xbox Insiders! We are improving the Xbox app on Windows by making it faster and easier to find your next favorite game. We’ve listened to your feedback and have been testing different designs internally over the last several months. Our goal is to create a unified Home experience that combines the best and latest content from both the Game Pass and Microsoft Store tabs, so you can easily find what you love without having to jump between tabs.
All Xbox players on Windows will benefit from Home, whether you play with Game Pass or purchase your games individually. Home brings you the latest games, news, curated recommendations, free-to-play content, and deals.
Check out the new Home tab and let us know your thoughts by completing this short 2-minute survey available here. Your feedback will be used to inspire future updates and plans as we continue to evolve.
Now, let’s take a look at some of the updates that you can expect to see in Home starting today.
New Home highlights
Featured content. At-a-glance view for you stay up to date on exciting game releases, new events, content available with Game Pass, sales, and more!
Deals and discounts. No more navigating through the app to find the latest deals and discounts. The new Home will now have collections with the best deals and discounts to make sure you can see available savings at a glance.
Note: Prices shown are for illustrative purpose only and may vary.
Curated collections and recommendations. Find games that are perfect for you with collections curated and personalized for you. Spend less time searching and more time playing games.
Note: Prices shown are for illustrative purpose only and may vary.
Jump back in (available with compact mode). In May, we tested Jump back in as part of the Game Pass tab experience. This feature allows players in Compact Mode to click on any game card shown, allowing them to go directly to its game hub, where you can jump right back into game play. Today, we are excited to add this feature as part of the new Home experience for all Xbox Insiders.
How to get Xbox Insider support and share your feedback
If you’re an Xbox Insider looking for support, please join our community on the Xbox Insider subreddit. Official Xbox staff, moderators, and fellow Xbox Insiders are there to help. We recommend adding to threads with the same topic before posting a brand new one. This helps us support you the best we can! Also, you can provide direct feedback to Team Xbox by following the steps here under the “Report a problem online” section.
If you aren’t part of the Xbox Insider Program yet and want to help create the future of Xbox and get early access to new features, join the Programtoday by downloading the Xbox Insider Hub forXbox Series X|S & Xbox Oneor Windows PC.
For more information on the Xbox Insider Program, follow us on Twitter at @XboxInsider. Keep an eye on future Xbox Insider Release Notes for more information regarding the PC Gaming Preview.
Note: This feature is being made available to Xbox Insiders enrolled in the PC Gaming Preview.
The Alien franchise has left a long, deep acid burn on the video game medium ever since the release of the first film in 1979. Whether hiding in lockers in Alien Isolation, blasting waves of creatures in Aliens: Fireteam Elite, or guiding a Marine squad to tactical victory in Aliens: Dark Descent, the series’ rich legacy has left plenty of room for creative interpretation.
With Alien: Rogue Incursion, celebrated VR developer Survios is aiming to make another major contribution to the Alien gaming legacy. This big-budget, immersive PlayStation VR2 experience promises to make players feel like they’re actually inhabiting the dark, brooding world of the films, from navigating the shadowy hallways to wielding authentic Marine firepower against the titular threat.
Ahead of the game’s launch on PS VR2 this December, we went hands-on with a pre-release build of this single-player survival-horror adventure. Here are some highlights of our experience.
An immersive VR Alien fantasy
Survios set out to make players feel firmly planted in the oppressive Alien universe, so don’t expect a cakewalk. Ammo and healing items are scarce, xenomorphs can deliver fatal one-hit blows, and hissing steam vents keep you on edge throughout. Rogue Incursion’s high-fidelity VR presentation is a knockout, with a level of visual detail and polish that puts it among the upper echelon of VR titles. You’ll know what we mean when you stare an encroaching alien in its dripping face and it feels like it’s mere inches away.
The perfect organism
Xenomorphs behave how you’d expect: they’re ominous and unpredictable. Sometimes they’ll slink through a doorway, upright and imposing. At other times they’ll drop to all fours, scuttling forward malevolently. They’re also highly mobile and seemed to take different routes depending on our position, clambering along walls and ceilings or dropping down from vents behind us. Knowing these threats can hit from any angle will keep your head swiveling as you scan the murky environments for threats, keeping your M41 pulse rifle trained on suspicious shapes lurking in the shadows. It all looks and feels ultra faithful to the first two films.
On-body inventory
The stakes are high, but Survios has you covered with a slick on-body inventory powered by the PS VR2’s Sense controllers. Reach over your right shoulder to grab your pulse rifle, clutch a healing stim from your left wrist, or draw a revolver from the holster on your hip. In just a few minutes, the intuitive inventory system became second nature, allowing us to keep our attention focused on encroaching hostiles and staying alive for a little while longer.
There’s something moving and it ain’t us
While there’s plenty of alien-blasting action, Rogue Incursion leaves ample room for quiet, tense moments where we bypassed locked doors or reprogrammed security discs to proceed further. Luckily, we were armed with the iconic Motion Tracker from the second film, and it’s something we quickly came to rely on. Reaching to our right bicep equipped the device, allowing us to track enemy (and ally) movements as we prowled the darkened corridors. This life-saving device can even be placed onto a surface to act as an extra set of eyes as you explore or reload your weapon. Don’t go off-world without it!
Welcome to the retro-future
The Alien universe’s technological aesthetic was solidified from the first moments we saw the Nostromo’s CRT computer monitors, chunky keyboards, and assorted analog gear. Survios pays thoughtful tribute to this tech, so expect to get up close and personal with plenty of 80’s-style gadgets in Rogue Incursion. The PDA tablet is a perfect example. Retrieved by reaching to your right arm, this handheld device can help you save your game and can be slotted into computers to download data. It also clunkily unfolds to reveal a large virtual touchscreen map, which in a clever touch can be scrolled through using your in-game finger.
Elevator action
Our hands-on session culminated in a frantic battle against waves of aliens as we waited for an elevator to arrive. We called on all of our gear and skills to hold the line. We blasted flammable barrels to ignite xenomorphs, under the watchful eye of our strategically placed Motion Tracker device. There were many intense close calls, usually forcing us to flee and heal or fumble fresh shells into our shotgun. Suddenly, a spiked tail burst through our chest, ending our game. But we didn’t dread a restart because the unpredictable actions of the aliens made each new attempt feel fresh and interesting.
Devils in the details
Survivos’s VR expertise was on full display throughout our play session. We were wowed by some of the small, thoughtful details that made the world feel complete, such as using your hand to wipe blood from our eyes or off a computer monitor. The game’s physicality is a huge asset, and as we grew accustomed to removing and replacing weapons and gear from our body, muscle memory took over and the feeling of reality crept in. Reloading a revolver? Press the Circle button to eject the cylinder and shake out the empty casings before reloading each individual bullet. Firing a pulse rifle? Be sure to stabilize the stock with your other hand, or the 10mm explosive-tip caseless rounds will launch into the ceiling instead of at the approaching alien.
Needless to say, we were impressed. Get ready to step into the boots of space marine Zula Hendricks when Alien: Rogue Incursion deploys on PS VR2 on December 19.
It’s been a long time since I’ve played a game that stuck with me in the way that 2015’s Life is Strange has. Its ability to tell a unique coming-of-age story about a rebellious but often shy teen without coming off preachy or overstaying its welcome was refreshing and had me thinking about it long after I discovered everything I could within the confines of Arcadia Bay. While the series has had a few sequels, prequels, and side stories since, none of them seemed to recapture the magic of those first five episodes for me – until now. Life is Strange: Double Exposure not only lives up to the sky-high standard set by the original but also manages to take it in a fresh new direction and improve on nearly every aspect from the previous games.
It was great to revisit Max Caulfield 10 years after the events of Life is Strange. Even though Max is well into her 20s now, she’s still very much the same character she was the last time we saw her: She’ll overanalyze her surroundings, make awkward jokes to herself, and, most importantly, take way too many pictures. But with her transition to adulthood comes a whole new set of issues she needs to deal with. Instead of worrying about fitting in and trying to impress everyone she met in Blackwell Academy, she’s now a grad student and has to act as an authority figure herself.
There are moments where she’s clearly coming to terms with the fact that she’s no longer young, such as when she questions some of the cringeworthy things she said in the original game or reminisces about when she was an undergrad and had to cram in as much studying and caffeine as possible before finals. It was the little moments like this that stuck with me and really helped make this new chapter in Max’s story even more relatable.
Writing on The Walls
As you’d expect in a Life is Strange game, you’ll need to make some tough decisions. Even though there are only a handful of major choices in each of the five chapters and not all of them will dramatically affect the overall outcome, they do all have consequences because characters will remember how you treat them and act accordingly – to a degree that previous games never managed to nail down. This time, conversations felt like I was talking to an actual person instead of playing a game of guessing the correct answer.
For example, in the first chapter, you are able to ask Amanda, the bartender of a local joint called The Snapping Turtle, out on a date if you play your cards right. On my first playthrough, I did everything I would need to in order to kickstart a romantic relationship with her by learning a handful of awful pick-up lines from other bar patrons. But on my second run, I opted not to ask her out and instead just became friends. While this didn’t necessarily change anything major with the story moving forward, I appreciated that there was a stark difference in how Amanda treated Max if they were dating or were just friends. In addition to romancing people, you can be mean, flirty, or even flat-out ignore someone if you want to. Without diving too heavily into spoiler territory, this is one of the few choose-your-own-adventure-style games I’ve played where I didn’t stress about making the “wrong decision” because every outcome felt natural and worth exploring rather than some being a consolation prize.
Double Exposure’s chapters each take around two or three hours to complete, which makes them shorter than those in some of the other Life is Strange games. This is actually a good thing, though, because I never felt like I was wasting my time dealing with a filler act or meandering around a party just to pad out the runtime. While there are a few plot points that don’t really seem to go anywhere unless you dig through Max’s phone, I never felt like I was missing out on anything too important to the overall story just because I neglected to keep up with my backlog of text messages and social media posts. I like a good epic-scale RPG, too, but the fact that Double Exposure respected my time and told a story that’s tight and concise was refreshing.
That story deals with a number of seriously heavy topics. Everything from divorce to anxiety to the different ways we grieve over the loss of a loved one is covered here in a way that’s so expertly written I never felt like any of these subjects were diminished or sensationalized – they just felt real. It would have been easy for Double Exposure to touch on a sensitive topic and then resolve it with a “thing bad” or “thing good” decision at the end, but instead the writing offers nuanced and appropriate approaches to its situations, many of which I’ve had to deal with in my own life. Seeing a video game character struggle to handle something like the anger and frustration one might feel after someone close to them takes their own life was an unexpected and especially well-executed bit of writing.
What really sells the writing is the incredible performances and animations.
It works so well in part because every character in Double Exposure has their own backstory and is written to feel like an actual human being, faults and all. For example, Reggie, a student at the school where Max teaches, will overshare at times because he sees Max as an authority figure, while Gwen, another teacher at Caledon Univeristy, keeps private details to herself because, like in real life, not everyone immediately tells everybody they meet everything about themselves.
What really sells Double Exposure’s writing and story is its absolutely incredible performances and character animations. While this has always been a highlight of the series, this game has more moments where characters would tell me everything they needed to say without speaking a word thanks to their subtle facial expressions. Say something mean and a character may look at you with disgust for a moment before responding. Pull somebody away from a group and you’ll see other characters briefly look disappointed that you interrupted them. While this isn’t anything new in games, the way in which Double Exposure emphasizes these little touches made me actually care about my actions and how I treated people. Thanks to this attention to detail and directing, Double Exposure’s character interactions are easily the most believable and well-executed I’ve seen in a Life is Strange game.
Reinventing Your Exit
Without getting too heavy into spoiler territory here, Double Exposure’s mystery is one full of twists and turns that definitely kept me guessing until I reached the finale.
The decision to give Max different powers was the correct choice because her original time manipulation abilities just wouldn’t have worked within the story being told here. If she could rewind time with the turn of her palm then the entire mystery could have been solved in a few moments, and that’s just no fun. Instead, those powers have been replaced by a set of interdimensional travel abilities that fit this new tale perfectly. As its title suggests, Max is able to view and travel between two separate realities: one that’s vibrant, warm, and full of life, complete with Christmas decorations and a more upbeat soundtrack, and another that’s miserable, cold, and marked by death. These realities exist in tandem with each other and are, in many ways, polar opposites. Everything from flyers on the walls of the school halls to the music and even how people interact with Max can be wildly different between the dead and living worlds.
I never found myself getting frustrated or lost on a puzzle.
Puzzles this time around greatly benefit from Max’s abilities, too. I never found myself getting frustrated or lost, and I’m happy to say there were never any sections where I had to dodge a train or perform any sort of frustrating quick time events. Her new abilities instead allow for a slower-pace where I needed to use deductive reasoning and explore both realities in order to find a clue or spy on somebody. Need to find something for someone in the living world? It’s probably nearby in the dead world. Need to sneak around an active murder investigation in the dead world? Just hop over to the living world and walk past where the guards are standing, then hop back. It’s not wildly complex stuff, but the way Double Exposure utilizes Max’s powers not only to help you find clues and explore but also to show how the world around you evolves in two separate paths at the same time makes this one of the more interesting uses of a multiverse in gaming.
Double Exposure’s smart use of reality hopping also helps with the story in ways that no other power in Life is Strange has before. For example, someone could be dealing with some trouble in one world that informs how you interact with them in the other. Meanwhile, The Snapping Turtle in the living world is warm, people are conversing with each other, and the music is upbeat and welcoming, but its dead world version has aggressive music, there are fewer people around, and the lighting is cold and uninviting. Because I was able to explore freely and instantly see the differences between both realities, I found myself learning about the worlds, their characters, and the results of my actions in a more meaningful way rather than just searching for exposition dumps and waiting for text messages.
Caledon University itself is an idealistic-looking Northeastern college campus. The buildings are old and covered in a layer of snow and student art, and the cinematography when you take a moment to reflect on a park bench or overlook shows off how beautiful this location is. Unfortunately, it’s also a bit smaller than the areas from the other Life is Strange Games, and while it would have been nice to explore a larger world outside of the few accessible locations on campus, Max’s house, and The Snapping Turtle, every area in Double Exposure is pretty densely packed with things to interact with and explore.
They are also bolstered by composer Tessa Rose Jackson with some of the best original music I’ve heard in a video game all year. The soundtrack not only perfectly captures the emotions of each scene but also helps to amplify the tone of the world, making it feel even more alive or dead, depending on which reality you’re in. The same can be said about the color grading and cinematography. The series is known for its cinematic look, and Double Exposure is no exception thanks to its rich color palette and smart camera work. Vista shots, snap zooms, and following focus on characters are all artfully executed in a way that would feel at home in a feature film.