Unreal 4, Unreal 5? No no no, take me again to the outdated Unreal: Going through Worlds (opens in new tab), unbeatable soundtracks, “Sure, it is a screenshot (opens in new tab),” now that is the stuff. Upcoming FPS Ghostware (opens in new tab) turns the indie boomer shooter renaissance’s propensity for reinterpretation and revitalization of outdated classics on Epic (Megagames)’s unique hits, utilizing the vibes and visuals of basic area shooters to stealthily current a story-heavy, single participant sport.
You get up in what appears to be a aware recreation of a ’90s shooter throughout the sport’s fiction. The “Wizard,” a sport grasp with the so-cringey-it’s-charming bearing of the Simpsons’ Comedian E-book Man, has trapped your consciousness on this digital world, and desires you to duke it out for eternity together with your fellow amnesiac, quirky, anime-style prisoners.
The setup jogs my memory a whole lot of Neon White, and like Neon White, the dialogue’s a bit of, uh, goofy. That is not an issue for me although—I am an ideological Sardaukar warrior who will at all times take up arms to defend Neon White’s goofy dialogue (opens in new tab), and I already discover Ghostware’s self-conscious Toonami dub dorks rising on me.
And the taking pictures underpinning all of it feels nice. There’s at all times been one thing to advocate simply loading into an area shooter with a bunch of bots and going to city, however including in story and a marketing campaign construction actually makes it pop. Ghostware does an important job of emulating the cadence of area shooter gameplay, and your opponents all nail the significantly squirrely, slippery nature of such a sport’s AI opponents.
Ghostware additionally blends genres and goes off the rails in attention-grabbing methods. In between ranges, you’ll be able to chat up your fellow gamers in a hub space, examine collectible lore entries, and revisit empty maps searching for secrets and techniques. This final function jogs my memory of the Haunted PS1 sport, No Gamers On-line (opens in new tab), and equally captures the eerie loneliness of being on an empty multiplayer server. Whilst you hunt for boomer shooter degree secrets and techniques, a form of Slenderman-y, glitchy poltergeist slowly pursues you, guaranteeing that you could’t dawdle.
Equally, there is a extra puzzle/exploration degree inserted towards the tip of the demo and introduced as “unfinished content material” you’ve got glitched into. It has an important eerie atmosphere to it, and the demo culminates in a enjoyable boss battle that appears like a extra easygoing model of Ultrakill’s V2 (opens in new tab).
Ghostware additionally has an important Y2K vibe to its menu and UI: most of its interface has that translucent, chunky, aero vibe of Deus Ex’s UI parts, whereas the primary menu is a cheeky mockup of a Home windows 98-style desktop. Ghostware is ready to launch in early entry on April 12, and you’ll at present wishlist it and take a look at the demo on Steam (opens in new tab).