In Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night, you play as a woman who must traverse a labyrinthine castle full of monsters and possessed paintings. That is to be expected: as the spiritual successor to the Castlevania series of games, it faithfully recreates many of that seriesā tropes, which include monsters and possessed paintings. Thatās normal. Then I found this one monster, named āPuppyā according to the in-game glossary.
I should probably just show you:
If you doubt your eyes, like I did when I first saw this āPuppy,ā that is in fact the disembodied head of a Maltese-looking dog. Not a demonic, possessed dog. Just a normal-ass dog. It even looks kind of cute, if you can get past the fact that it is a disembodied head.
Turns out getting past that fact is hard for me to do! Some backstory: my family also has a Maltese. His name is Snoopy, and heās kind of a moron. Heās also extremely cute, as Malteses with puppy cuts tend to be.
Look at him:
So this video game is asking me to slay my dogās disembodied head with my flaming axe. Just casually, like it wanted to know if I had five dollars I could lend it. Hey Josh, just running to the castle for a few things, care for a bit of puppicide while Iām at it? Man, if I wanted doggy snuff, Iād see A Dogās Purpose
Donāt worry, if youāre not a dog person, Bloodstained has you covered too. Check out this damn cat:
Again: Itās a regular-looking cat. Cute even! (Also, itās worth noting, the thing has its head attached to its damn body, so itās clear where Koji Igarashiās biases lie.) Whatās that? Real cats donāt have horns and bat wings for ears? Couldāve fooled me!
Anyway, I hate this. (I donāt hate it.) Itās monstrous. (Itās very funny.) How could you do this, Bloodstained? (I canāt wait to see what other messed-up shit is in this game.)
Do otters next.