Maciejewski for PlayStation Plus Hidden Gems on Aug□ To be honest, Prodeus is pretty much how you would have expected Doom 3 to have been back in 2004, if it had followed on from Doom 1 & 2 that is.Written by A.J. The exploration can also be rewarding if you find a secret, usually this can nab you a weapon earlier than usual or a large cache of health/ammo. Some areas of stages can only be accessed via a colour coded door that requires to find the matching key-card in that typically old school fashion. Exploration is also something you’ll to do. Variety comes in the form of a little platforming or in the encounters from the various enemies and the numerous guns available with multiple firing modes – the occasional boss will chew through plenty of your arsenal as well. So be sure to keep that health & armour topped up too. Thankfully there’s plenty of guns from pistols to the obligatory shotguns to chaos weapons, with most guns sharing ammo with those of the same type (Pistol, dual SMG & Chaingun share bullets for example) – best keep an eye on that ammo! There’s also no regen etc. There isn’t much else to the game, side challenges aside, other than the tight shooting gameplay. For the most part your mission will be find a relic and reach the exit whilst blasting the crap out of everything else that moves in the stage. On my system (R51600/16GB/RTX 2080ti) 4K/60 was easy enough to get done, but there’s plenty of options to tweak if you do need to nab some extra performance for a smoother or faster framerate.Īs with the graphics, the gameplay here is decidedly old school. Thankfully performance seems good so far. This action complimented by a rocking soundtrack that kicks in at the right time before shuffling away once all your enemies are vanquished. You really can paint a room red as enemies are ripped to shreds by gunfire, blood will even drip from the ceiling if you manage to get some up there. Once the shooting starts the game goes OTT visually, with a ridiculous amount of gore & effects. It is up to you tho, there are options to tweak the look of the game if you want less, or even more, of a retro look. The way it casts through hilariously low res smoke or reflects to your gun and onto enemies gives the game a modern sheen, also creates some nice ambience in the quieter sections. Sounds 90’s enough, but what really gives it a modern edge is the lighting. The stages are 3D with some retro inspired texture work, with the enemies and special effects generally 2D based. This game goes the route of an old school shooter visually, to match up with the rest of the package, yet manages to pack in enough modern techniques that it doesn’t look out of place at all. It’s not an easy toolset to get to grips with, but is complex enough to allow to allow for stages as good as the main game. This allows the community to build & share levels with other users, requires a sign up to access levels from others, which will no doubt offer some hand picked by the developers too. The main addition to longevity would be the level editor. The games games campaign does offer more than a simple linear route, with the shards collected during stages occasionally opening new areas in previous sections or alternate paths that can offer new challenges to play. So as expected, there isn’t really a sweeping narrative to distract you from what needs to be done. Protagonists in boomer shooters don’t need to pontificate as to what or why they’re in the situation they are, they just need pointing to the direction of the nearest antagonist. Prodeus takes place in a world of the same name, with the player taking up the role of a corruption within this world that just seeks to destroy its creator and all those poor souls that get in the way.
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