Hereâs the first big-budget big game surprise of the E3 season: Dying Light, a first-person free-running zombie survival game from Techland, the makers of Dead Island, slated for current and next-gen consoles (and PC) for 2014. Think: Mirrorâs Edge with the undead.
The game was featured last week at a special pre-E3 showcase for select gaming press held by Warner Brothers Interactive Entertainment, publishers of the Batman: Arkham and Scribblenauts games. I was there. I saw the game. It presents really well. Or at least it didâand probably will again. There are two issues with it. But hold those thoughts.
The game takes place, as so many do, in a world beset with zombies. It looks like Rio, but theyâre not specifying. Familiar set-up, novel execution: you play in the first-person perspective through a day-night cycle. By day, you prowl the open-world, scavenging for supplies, going on missions and side-missions, using weaponsâI mostly saw melee weaponsâin order to fight zombies and other survivors. (There will be guns, too.) But at night, zombies become more powerful and aggressive. You pretty much just run.
All of this happens with the added twist that you can do parkour across rooftops. Itâs a pity WBIE hasnât released video of the game yet, because thatâs the âwowâ element hereâthe experience of running from zombies across rooftops with the grace and speed not seen since DICEâs beloved free-running game Mirrorâs Edge is the thing that makes it special.
In the demo I saw, played live presumably on PC, the gameâs protagonist first ran across rooftops with a bat in hand, bashing zombies, climbing poles, jumping into a house to find a girl who was crying and hiding in a closet. The player switched to an axe and then a machete. Thereâs a weapons-crafting system, so our guy then made himself an electrified machete, used that and then kicked some zombies, to boot. (Pun intended. Deal with it.)
At one point, the player came upon some other people who had beat our guy to some supplies. Our guy put his hands up and backed off.
The sun began to set and things became more ominous. More zombies seemed to shuffle among the streets. We had to hide. It turns out that our character is himself infected with a zombie virus and that enables him to see the more powerful zombies out there. We spotted one, but it gave chase. This led to the most interesting moment in the demoâone that hopefully wasnât canned, because, if itâs dynamic, well, this could be great: the player ran from a crowd of these zombies, looking back with what was presumably the tap of a look-behind button; he got far enough ahead and ran into a building; they missed that and ran past, he ran around them, confounding their stupid zombie brains, defying their deadly flocking, all while in a high-speed run.
In theory, you can do all of this in four-player co-op, too.
Asked if the developers at the Polish studio Techland were apprehensive about making yet another zombie game, one of the gameâs developers, Techland brand manager Blazej âBlazeâ Krakowiak, said, âThat would only be the case if we didnât believe in the originality of the game. I think the day-night cycle, the way the world lives by itâand the complete freedom to explore it based on the free-runningâare, I think, defining elements for the game. [They are] not the only important parts, but definitely the parts we used to set it up as something different.â
The game is being built primarily for the next-gen PlayStation 4 and Xbox One consoles and PC, he added, though itâll be downscaled in some undefined way for PS3 and Xbox 360. Itâs being created by Techlandâs original Dead Island team. A different team made the Dead Island sequel Riptide
But there are two issues. One is that the timing of this gameâs announcement is a little awkward, as, given the bloody events in London yesterday, this suddenly doesnât feel like a very appealing fantasy:
The other issues, letâs be frank, is the developer. Techland is a studio of great ambition and, recently, less great execution. The recent Riptide was ripped as a technological and technical disappointment. The studio, in general, is one of big ideas that donât seem to be consistently delivered. I asked Krakowiak about this, pointing out that others, like me, might be torn between wanting to be optimistic but feeling skeptical about Techlandâs rep.
https://lastchance.cc/dead-island-riptide-the-kotaku-review-476715264%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
I mentioned that the Fallout/Skyrim people at Bethesda had recently had similar problems. Theyâd been releasing really buggy games and had changed some processes so that they could better deliver games that ran well. I pressed for some clarity on what Techland was changing so that they could deliver something closer to what they promised.
âThere are stories behind every game we can never discuss publicly, because weâre classy,â he said, surely aware that I understood that Techlandâs recent games have come from other publishers than WBIE. âWe donât want to blame any circumstances or anyone or anything because ultimately we are responsible and thereâs no escaping that. But this is a complicated, multi-million dollar business and not everything always goes perfectly. But we are doing all we can to make Dying Light as great a game as it can be.â
Dying Light is set for a 2014 release. Keep an eye out for video footage. I initially rolled my eyes at the sight of yet another zombie game, but the free-running really does make this game look special.
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