Sunset Overdriveis a garish,Watch Suicide Squad Online over-the-top explosion of color and sound. Its punk rock sensibilities are evident at every turn. Even four years after launching in 2014 as an Xbox One exclusive, this is still one of the best games of its generation.
The credit for that belongs entirely to Insomniac Games, the same studio responsible for 2018 game of the year contender Spider-Man. Fans of Sunsetno doubt felt echoes of that earlier game in Spidey. At their core, both games are about the joy of movement.
SEE ALSO: In Red Dead Redemption 2, it is not always easy to do the right thing — Games to Play Before You DieSpider-Manfeeds that joy with the bursts of motion that spring out of your web-swinging and death-defying leaps through the breaks in Manhattan's concrete jungle. The Marvel superhero is you constant anchor, a fixed focus point who sails through the skies under your guidance as the bustling Big Apple becomes a blur all around you.
Sunset Overdrivepulls more from the Tony Hawk's Pro Skaterplaybook. There's no skateboard (or wheels of any kind), but your custom hero's seemingly magical footwear can grind on, bounce off of, or wall run across most surfaces, physics be damned. Realism goes out the window in the name of fun. It works.
The premise is simple, if ridiculous: It's 2027 and Sunset City is caught in the grip of an apocalyptic mutant uprising triggered by a shady company's toxic energy drink. Your nameless hero -- a completely blank slate for you to customize -- is one of the few survivors of the so-called "awesomepocalypse," and you're on a mission to figure out What The Hell Happened.
It's hardly a straightforward effort. Many of the surviving humans in Sunset City have formed together around different factions, with each one based in a fortified location that keeps them safe from the mutant hordes. Your investigation crosses paths with all of them at different points, and those interactions drive the bulk of Sunset Overdrive's plot.
The factions of Sunset City are similar in a lot of ways to the gangs of director Walter Hill's cult film classic, The Warriors. Each group of average Joes and Janes has defined their post-society identity around whatever stuff they were into: fantasy LARPers, a privileged rich-kid faction of "Oxfords," and a group of former Scouts that now lives by the samurai code.
Sunset Overdrive pulls from the Tony Hawk's Pro Skater playbook.
Helping them is often a matter of defeating some baddie or finding and fetching a lost treasure -- simple video game objectives -- but Sunset Overdrive's sticky mechanics keep you engaged. Once you master the controls (no small feat!), the simple act of getting from A to B becomes deeply satisfying.
That's especially true when you factor in the combat. Sunset Overdrivedraws much of its inspiration there from another notable Insomniac favorite: the Ratchet & Clank series.
You have a massive arsenal at your disposal in this game, but it's not the all-too-familiar video game lineup of handguns, assault rifles, and grenade/rocket launchers. Sunset Overdrive's weapons are cobbled-together creations, built out of the remains of a fractured world.
There's the High Fidelity, a Sunset Overdrivetake on an assault rifle that spits out a stream of vinyl records whenever you pull the trigger. The Dude, on the other hand, is a grenade launcher-like weapon that you can charge up to fire explosive bowling balls. Many of Sunset Overdrive's weapons behave like more traditional guns, but with a twist: for example, High Fidelity's records bounce off of walls and ricochet around the environment; The Dude's bowling balls aren't launched so much as they just roll along on the ground.
In case it wasn't clear already: Sunset Overdrivedoesn't take itself very seriously. But it commits. There's no space for realism in this world, but the internal logic is consistent all throughout. Once you understand Sunset City and the motivations driving the people living in it, everything else falls into place.
Wrapping around all of Sunset Overdrive's big ideas is a punk rock aesthetic that informs every inch of the game: the blaring music that responds organically to whatever's happening on the screen; the garish cartoon graphics that more often than not look like an elaborate back tattoo come to life; the DIY design of the weapons, and the "have it your way" approach to character customization.
Even the game itself rebels against traditional ideas of open world design. The environment is littered with different kinds of collectibles, but all of it doubles as in-game currency. More standard "fetch/find/kill this thing" quests are broken up around much more elaborate tower defense-style encounters where you set up defenses around a base as you fend off hordes of mutants.
Games like this that aren't built around drawing in a large online community don't tend to have a long shelf life. And four years old is positively ancientin video game industry terms. But this is the rare game that's filled with such fresh ideas and novel mechanics, it's as vital now as it was when it launched on Oct. 28, 2014.
Now, in 2018, it's easier to get than ever. You can find Xbox One copies for pennies online, or subscribe to Xbox Game Pass and get it that way. Sunset Overdriveis also, in an unexpected twist, coming to Windows on Nov. 16, 2018. It's a special game. Go play it.
Topics Gaming
Previous:Robin Triumphant
Huawei saw a sellout launch of Mate 60 Pro model on September 3 · TechNodeChinese automaker GAC Group plans to accelerate international expansion · TechNodeiPhone password reset attacks are real – how to protect yourselfWhy the Trump administration is scared of a climate lawsuit from kidsWordle today: The answer and hints for April 20How to track your partner's location like Taylor Swift in 'Black Dog'Watch out, Apple Vision Pro. An ‘XboxApple's FineWoven accessories might be on their way outWordle today: The answer and hints for April 23Videos from Hurricane Michael show its stunning strengthWordle today: The answer and hints for April 22How to track your partner's location like Taylor Swift in 'Black Dog'Wordle today: The answer and hints for April 22Apple forced to pull Meta's WhatsApp, Threads from China’s App Store. Here’s why.Oppo launches Find N3 Flip, first clamshell foldable phone with three cameras · TechNodeTrump tells '60 Minutes' that climate change will 'change back again'Wordle today: The answer and hints for April 20Wordle today: The answer and hints for April 2010 animals that hibernate, aside from bearsPS5 Pro vs. PS5: 3 biggest expected upgrades Happy Birthday, Donald Barthelme Thomas Ken’s “Old Hundredth” by Sadie Stein Lonely Hunter by Sadie Stein Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1927 The light verse of Phyllis McGinley, born on this day in 1905. The Morning News Roundup for April 16, 2014 Recapping Dante: Canto 22, or Don’t Play Too Close to the Tar Pits by Alexander Aciman Sadie Stein on Philip Larkin’s Poem “The Trees” Michael Bruce’s “Elegy—Written in Spring” by Dan Piepenbring The Morning News Roundup for April 17, 2014 The Art of Sploshing The Morning News Roundup for April 2, 2014 Stupid Is by Sadie Stein The Morning News Roundup for April 15, 2014 Sadie Stein on Smiling at Strangers in Public Opening Day by Sadie Stein The Morning News Roundup for March 26, 2014 The Life and Times of Josep Pla Barry Hannah on Flannery O’Connor, who was born today in 1925. Bull City Redux by Nicole Rudick
2.3305s , 10156.0859375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Suicide Squad Online】,Openness Information Network