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issue165:jeux_ubuntu

Ceci est une ancienne révision du document !


Website: https://store.steampowered.com/app/1380010/Waiting_For_The_Raven/

Price: $5 - $9 USD

Blurb: “Become Master of Spies, plant connections and agents in the underworld. Who will you join? Who may be betrayed? Decipher Letters, Solve Mysteries, Manage Businesses, Spy, Bribe, Abduct, Murder, Seduce in an experimental atmospheric hybrid of first-person & top-down espionage experience.”

This little gem has just hit version 1.0 and deserves a review.

Let me start off by saying this is a RPG management game, but your tools are on the darker side. Murder, seduction, counterfeiting, robbery – to rule a city all in the name of “business”. Each unlock brings a new mechanic, so the game is not just a rehash of the same game loop. This can be good, and this can be bad too. If your ADHD is on form, you will enjoy the game, otherwise as you progress, you may feel a bit overwhelmed. Some people love this, some people hate this, just like the action wheel that has pictures of your actions. It was a bit of “meh” as it does not jump out at you, what each one is. That said, now you know the “not so great” stuff about the game.

Now for the good stuff.

The options feel like they could be infinite, that you could have many outcomes playing the same game. Replay-ability… check. I will tell you more about choices later. The game is a top-down view, with what I can only assume are hexes, but it also has some first-person parts thrown in. Do not expect an FPS though, the first-person parts are mainly to look for things in a room, which is the only part that feels a bit repetitive, but gives you a break from your map.

Graphics

The graphics are good, but nothing to write home about. Since you will be spending most of your time on the map scheming and plotting, this does not detract any from the game. The cut-scenes are (or rather seem to be) hand painted and bring a hand crafted aesthetic to the game. The first-person part seems to feel a bit 2000’s, and actually adds to the atmosphere of the game. To be completely honest, it feels a hit like those hidden object games. Not that I did not enjoy those games, I am just trying to let you understand what you are letting yourselves in for.

Sound

The sound is very atmospheric, but there is no dialogue (other than the voice acting during the cut-scenes). Prepare yourself for some ‘light reading’. Ok, I lied, there is a lot of reading. The plot unfolds through the story, which you need to read. At no point does the music feel repetitive, as it is this ambient sound that immerses you into the game. There is so much going on later in the game, that you would not find the pink panther theme playing odd. Thankfully, it is not.

Gameplay

This is where the game shines. You are a shadowy figure who pours over every inch of the map to evaluate the ‘territory’ that you control. The game and the story don’t make you feel like Gargamel from the Smurfs, though. You feel like some spy master. The communications are all secretive; a raven arrives with a letter, or an anonymous one is slid under your door. You even operate from a mansion. Your “resources” are connections, rumours, progression and gold. Since the game is turn based, you need to plan your actions in advance. For instance, you need to recruit an employee and tell him or her what to do in the next turn. Then the Spanish inquisition arrives, because nobody expects the Spanish inquisition, well not quite, but you are racing against the inquisition.

The part that has everyone talking is the ‘decoding’ or ‘deciphering’ of messages that you intercept. Basically, you are replacing letters, and as it is English, it is not too difficult. Things are in place, so the three-letter word at the start of a sentence is probably “The” and will help you with the rest. Interesting fact, the way the Enigma machine was breached, during the second world war, was that someone repeated the same message, the weather report, if memory serves, so if every message started with “here follows the weather report” that is a lot of letters you have to work with. The same holds true here. A lot of people have difficulty with this part. I suggest you brush up on breaking cyphers. There are helpful tomes in your room too, so search within.

You start your map of the city shrouded in a ‘fog of war’ - I don’t know how apt that is, but it is what it is. You need to send out scouts to ‘reveal’ more of the map as you progress. What is amazing is the amount of choice you have. You can have the owner of, say a tavern, seduced, befriended, blackmailed or even murdered, to get his property. Pay attention to the ring menu. You need to remember which icon does what. Also there are sub-ring menus (is this the right term?). You need to scout a location before you can act on it – something a lot of people fail to do. Remember to read, read, and read the instructions, hints and tips again. The interface is not a pick-up-and-play intuitive type of thing.

Overall I find it to be fun. Friends have rage, quit, and gone back to it the very next day (so it must be addictive). You will have many ‘lightbulb’ moments. This is normal. The game is in active development, as I mentioned, just went to 1.0, so it is getting better all the time.

Grab it now, while it is cheap, and you will have a replay-able game for your holiday! (Maybe even a love-hate relationship).

issue165/jeux_ubuntu.1612007122.txt.gz · Dernière modification : 2021/01/30 12:45 de auntiee