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Blues and Bullets: Episode One Review

Added: 28.07.2015 22:40 | 20 views | 0 comments


Santa Esperanza or Sin City? I found it hard to tell the difference between the two black-and-white burgs in the first episode of Blues and Bullets, a five-part adventure series from indie developer A Crowd of Monsters that sets a striking neo-noir tone. There are just as many shadow-streaked rooms, rain-swept streets, and bloody red accents as in anything scripted by Frank Miller, while the plot is stuffed with enough psychos, horrific violence, and cornball dialogue to make Dashiell Hammett roll over in his grave. This is an inspired rip-off for the most part, however, hitting the same notes as a good hard-boiled detective novel despite a few offbeat scripting choices and some technical glitches.

As noted above, the location is a crime-ridden fictional city called Santa Esperanza. The year is 1955. The protagonist is Eliot Ness, but not the historical figure or even the fake one from TV and movies. This take on the leader of the famed Untouchables who brought down Chicago gangland boss Al Capone is different from anything seen before. Instead of taking out old Scarface with a tax case, Ness wound the case down with a Schwarzeneggerian shootout, slaughtering a dozen or more mobsters single-handedly while so drunk he could barely stand up. Twenty or so years later, Ness is a haunted ex-cop running a diner and trying to run away from his past, which includes murdered friends, an unhealthy attachment to a dead buddy’s wife, and a whole lot of booze and guilt. All this is complicated by the fact that Capone has just been paroled and is asking his old nemesis to help find his daughter, who has been kidnapped by a sinister cult that is abducting, mutilating, and sometimes slaughtering little kids.

Blues and Bullets bleeds neo-noir style reminiscent of the Sin City movies. And not just because of the red slashes on the otherwise black-and-white scenery.

All in all, it’s an innovative look at an American icon crossed with a more modern serial killing saga. But it’s also kind of off-putting because everyone knows the story of Ness and Capone courtesy of decades of TV shows and movies. I eventually came to appreciate this bizarre new angle on characters I thought I knew, although I never completely abandoned the notion that all this messing with history was sort of unnecessary. This version of Ness only shares a name with the real person, and the same goes for Capone. Swapping out Chicago for Santa Esperanza is also an odd choice given the use of real names for the lead characters. Why not go one way or the other? Doing both makes the whole story feel somewhat off-kilter, for no real purpose.

Added alt-history weirdness creates a surreal mish-mash. Strange concepts are tossed in for kicks, like the apparent survival of the Hindenburg and its subsequent renovation into a luxury hotel in the clouds. You visit it early on in the episode as a real place, but it is so impossibly huge and luxurious that it’s more Xanadu than retrofitted zeppelin. Even though you’re supposed to be on board the big balloon, you also see that famous photo of the airship exploding into flames over Lakehurst, New Jersey framed in its hallways. I was never sure what to think here. All things considered, the plot is innovative and guaranteed to keep you guessing about what’s coming next.

Blues and Bullets’ gameplay is standard for an adventure game, although both the action and sleuthing is volved than that in other similar series in the episodic genre. This is more of a traditional adventure game than what Telltale produces, for example. The structure isn’t quite as linear. Many choices influence the flow of the story, and dialogue options run a gamut of emotions that subtly alter how interactions play out with other characters. There is also more of a necessity to explore environments. Investigations are hands-on. Ness tackles a gruesome murder by examining the entire scene, from the occult altar made of severed hands in the bathroom to the impaled corpse in the living room and the discarded spoon in the hallway, which may have been used to scoop out the victim’s eyeballs. Ness puts clues together on a deduction board that leads him to conclusions. Nothing here is particularly challenging, although the process replicates the step-by-step nature of a criminal investigation.

Surreal glimpses into Eliot Ness’s tortured mind are striking if more than a bit cheesy.

Action scenes are also volved. Button-press fights and reactions are similar to those in more casual adventure series, but they tend to demand a little more from the player. Again, there isn’t anything here too tough, although you do have to hit buttons a little more quickly and more often than in similar games. In addition to the bare-knuckle sequences, there are also firefights in which you take cover and blast away at enemies. Anyone with even the most rudimentary arcade skills will be able to take on these vaguely GTA-inspired battles without breaking a sweat, but at least the game goes through the motions and gives you more to do. I’m hoping that future episodes ramp up the challenge and take advantage of the gangster setting with some serious gunplay.

What makes Blues and Bullets really stand out is its atmosphere. The game looks like an interactive version of the Sin City movies. The entire game is cloaked in long shadows and a gloomy air of menace, which is built up to such an extreme that even Ness’s diner in the middle of a sunny afternoon comes off as a midnight spook house. Surreal touches add to this effect. A dream sequence illustrating Ness’s tortured thoughts plays out as a gunfight in and around giant headline letters recounting just how corrupt and awful his world has become. Other stylish touches add tension. While most of the game consists of high-contrast black-and-white, red accent slashes are everywhere. This is of course used to indicate blood and to create a constant threat of violence. Even Ness’s ever-present red tie is a warning sign that bad things are about to go down.

The dialogue is also very good, albeit in the cheesy vein of old-time noir. Ness is pretty much the prototypical self-flagellating private detective with a weakness for booze and dames. Many lines teeter on the edge of self-parody. At times it’s not entirely clear whether the game is actually laughing at itself. While most of the story takes everything as seriously as an IRS audit, some aspects are over the top. One moment in which Ness interrupts a knife-thrower to the disappointment of the crowd and his now-perforated female target is so played up for slapstick that the Untouchable briefly turns into Frank Drebin. The voice acting is all over the place, but the leads are good for the most part. Ness is played as kind of a growly, boozy take on Batman, and Capone is a no-surprises, marble-mouthed thug. The cast is small, though, and actors try to hide their multiple roles with broad accents that do nothing but make the game seem amateurish.

Eliot didn’t encounter gruesome stuff like this during his days leading the Untouchables.

Another issue that illustrates the indie nature of Blues and Bullets is the presence of a few bugs. Slowdown is the most noticeable problem. Every so often, the game will drop to single-digit framerates. This usually takes place during panoramic introductions that sweep across city blocks. On a couple of occasions, this brought the game to a complete halt for me and forced a restart. Another annoyance was a cursor that never stayed still. On selection menus in the options and within the game itself as I organized the investigation board, the selected option constantly clicked to the right regardless of whether I was using the mouse and keyboard or the gamepad controls, forcing me to push back against the grain to make a choice. This was merely an irritant, although it could have been show-stopping if the game had demanded teraction in this fashion.

Although Blues and Bullets isn’t without its flaws, this first episode sets a distinctive comic-book, crime-noir attitude compelling enough to keep you playing and looking forward to what the series will offer in future installments. Anyone who enjoys classic noir fiction or the decidedly modern, bloody take on it offered up on the grim streets of Sin City will find a lot to like here.

From: www.gamespot.com

New Xbox One System Software Update in Preview Fixes Headset Issues, Brings More Minor Changes

Added: 25.07.2015 6:18 | 32 views | 0 comments


Microsoft made a new update to the Xbox One's system software available for download to preview members, continuing on the track of implementing minor, non user-facing changes with a quick iteration, and fixing an issue with the Turtle Beach Elite 800X headset.

From: n4g.com

Turtle Beach Stealth 500X Xbox One Gaming Headset - Hardware Review | Chalgyr's Game Room

Added: 22.07.2015 16:18 | 19 views | 0 comments


Chalgyr's Game Room writes: Turtle Beach is a powerful brand; there is a reason they hold over 50% of the market share for console accessories and it generally has to do with the fact that they build solid, high quality headsets. With the announcement of the new Turtle Beach Elite 800X headset, we at Chalgyr's Game Room decided we would take a minute to share the love and wealth of some of their other gear, in this case the Stealth 500X for the Xbox One.

From: n4g.com

Here Is Space Piracy for Beginners in Elite Dangerous on Xbox One

Added: 22.07.2015 14:19 | 11 views | 0 comments


OX: Here at Outside Xbox we've always aspired to be mighty space pirates, feared in every system from here to Rho Ophiuchi. Unfortunately, we're not particularly adept at space piracy. Just look at our calamitous mission to assassinate coffee-quaffing space celeb Gianmaria Obligis.

From: n4g.com

Elite Dangerous Interview Full Experience Without Compromise Xbox One

Added: 22.07.2015 13:18 | 4 views | 0 comments


GamerFitNation: Elite Dangerous is a game that we have heard much about over the past couple of months. After playing the game at Pax East on the Oculus Rift, the game is finally coming over to the Xbox One. GamerFitNations very own Tamika Redinfamy Moultrie recently got the chance to speak with Ben Dowie, producer on the title, and we learned a lot.

From: n4g.com

Zombie Army Trilogy Gone Retail

Added: 21.07.2015 17:27 | 60 views | 0 comments


Sniper Elite series series comes to an apocalyptic conclusion; recut, remastered and unleashed on Xbox One, PlayStation 4 and PC

From: www.gamershell.com

The Gamesmen, Episode 79 Talk to the Hand

Added: 21.07.2015 5:19 | 58 views | 0 comments


Join Amras89 and Hardlydan for game talk and fun! This time, The Gamesmen talk about Shenmue 3, the inevitable end of The Flock, Dead Island 2 saying goodbye to Yager, Prototype running better on PlayStation 3 than Xbox One, Super Mario Maker criticism, the new 22 Cans CEO has a comment to make, AMD and the Nintendo NX, and the UK Government. Games discussed are Elite Dangerous, Batman: Arkham Knight, oO, Gunstar Heroes, Saints Row 2, Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butchers Bay, Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athena, Watchdogs, and Driver Speedboat Paradise.

From: n4g.com

PioneerSpaceSim 20150715

Added: 18.07.2015 17:18 | 6 views | 0 comments


Explore the galaxy at the turn of the 31st century in this space sim designed to bring the old Elite feeling back

Tags: Elite
From: spd.rss.ac


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