EuroRPG developer Piranha Bytes announced its new game, to be published by Nordic Games, in utterly unremarkable fashion: via press release, with no meaningful details or a trailer or even actual game art. Just the image above, posted on Facebook, and a parade of buzzwords that would make any E3 press conference presenter blush.
The game in question is ELEX, likely a codename as itâs an acronym for âeclectic, lavish, exhilarating and xenial,â is an open world RPG (of course) that is âset in a brand new post-apocalyptic science fantasy universe that puts players into a huge, seamless game world full of original characters, mutated creatures, deep moral choices and powerful action.â You donât say!
The release also claims ELEX will be âedgy, dark, uncompromising, complex,â and a âhandcrafted action role-playing experience.â The game director at Piranha Bytes says itâs âa completely new game experience.â That seems like a stretch, given the other descriptors being used here.
Joking aside, this press release is rather emblematic of the problems I have with video game marketing. We know that most games are pretty similar to other games, and the words that devs and publishers use to market their games are intended to evoke games they think the target audience likes. But at the same time they want to convince us their games are completely new things the likes of which weâve never seen before, even though everything they just said makes it sound exactly like something weâve seen before.
Of course, I know nothing at all about ELEX so I canât pass judgment on the game itself. But I can scoff at all this marketingspeak. At least until Nordic and Piranha Bytes show off a vertical slice at Gamescom in a couple months.
Yell at this author of this post on twitter at @philrowen