Super Mario 3D All-Stars Announced with Super Mario 64, Super Mario Sunshine, and Super Mario Galaxy

Nintendo has announced Super Mario 3D All-Stars, which includes Super Mario 64, Super Mario Galaxy, and Super Mario Sunshine, and it will be released on September 18, 2020.

Super Mario 3D All-Stars features optimized versions of 3D Super Mario games Super Mario 64, Super Mario Sunshine, and Super Mario Galaxy. Additionally, this collection includes an in-game music-player mode to play the music and songs from all three games. Like the version in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, this can also be played with the screen turned off.

All three games include updated Joy-Con controls with rumble, and players will still be able to use motion controls in Super Mario Galaxy is they wish, as they Joy-Con controllers will mimic the original Wii remote’s function.

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A press release explains that the game will receive a limited physical release, and will seemingly only be on sale digitally until March 31, 2021. We’ve contacted Nintendo for clarification on whether the game will be available again in any form after that time.

Super Mario 64 was a launch title for the Nintendo 64, and we’ve ranked it as our 10th best game of all time in our list of Top 100 Video Games of All Time. We said “Mario games are synonymous with fun and innovation, and perhaps Mario 64 is the best example of the latter. It gathered the core elements of Mario’s best 2D, side-scrolling adventures and worked out how to translate them into a groundbreaking 3D world. It was still recognisably Mario – he collected mushrooms and ran and jumped his way to success, but he was forever changed.”

Super Mario Galaxy was released on the Nintendo Wii in 2007 and, in our 9.7/10 review, we said, “Super Mario Galaxy is one of the greatest platformers I have ever played, Wii’s best game, and an absolute must-own experience. And to me, this odd trek through space really does feel like the true sequel to Mario 64. It harkens back to the N64 classic with nostalgic faces and places from the Mushroom Kingdom, but it also re-invents the franchise with new space-themed mechanics and fresh Wii-enhanced controls.”

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Super Mario Sunshine was originally released on the GameCube in 2002 and, in our review, we said “It’s completely captivating from the start, and I can’t rave enough about the tight controls. It just feels right. However, I am quite disappointed by the vacation theme and Nintendo’s stubbornness to pay attention to presentation. The story and character design especially is poorly executed. I think Nintendo finds making Peach into a total ditz and Mario into a fat goon amusing, but it feels pretty lame for those of us with some intelligence.”

This was far from the only new Mario game announced today – check out everything announced in the Super Mario Bros. 35th Anniversary Nintendo Direct.

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Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1+2 Remake Review

How do you remake a game that’s spent two decades perched at the pinnacle of what this industry has to offer? I mean, the original Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2 isn’t just considered as one of the greatest sports games ever made; it’s literally wedged amongst the top three highest-rated video games of all time on Metacritic. You’d probably be better off cutting your losses and photocopying the Mona Lisa at this point, right?

Well, no, because despite the high bar set by the originals, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 + 2 is an absolutely rip-roaring remake. Vicarious Visions has successfully brought Neversoft’s esteemed classics back to life, allowing old and new fans alike to experience these masterpieces through a modern lens while remaining entirely respectful to the moves, the maps, and the music that’s been seared into the brains of millions since the turn of the millennium.

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THPS1+2 pushes off on the right foot immediately, with a fantastic intro fusing footage of the iconic stars of the original games with clips of the new skateboarding superstars joining the roster. It shouldn’t be understated how effectively this otherwise fairly simple sizzle reel instantly injects these new skaters into the fabric of Pro Skater, meaning they don’t just feel tacked on.

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You have not. Not like this.

Everybody’s Heard About the Bird

It’s actually quite remarkable dropping into each of the nearly 20 levels and marvelling at just how authentically they mirror the geometry of the 1999 and 2000 versions of these same maps. They’re obviously infinitely richer with granular detail, filled with impressive lighting, and – unlike the PS1 oldies – feature a draw distance that stretches to the horizon instead of disappearing into fog when it hits double figures, but they’re also wonderfully familiar. The graphics don’t necessarily eclipse those of other triple-A sports sims but they’re quite handsome, and importantly they’re vastly superior to the peculiarly stylised and generally unattractive look of THPS5.

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There aren’t really any duds amongst the maps but I was particularly impressed by the Mall’s mild reinvention as an abandoned and decaying ghost town that looks like a flood has swept through it, and Venice’s vibrant colour explosion, with almost every surface sporting generations of layered graffiti. Hangar is also a highlight; it’s never been the most interesting level but here it’s been turned into a virtual shrine to original Tony Hawk developer Neversoft, which is a nice touch.

Both individual games are represented as a separate string of levels in THPS1+2 – and you can progress through them independently – but beyond that everything is unified and accessible from a central hub. Skills points for your skaters that you earn in THPS1 maps, for instance, make your skater perform better for the THPS2 maps – and vice versa. This is a good, elegant solution that beats having each game as an otherwise unrelated mode, like in Vicarious Visions’ last remake effort, the Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy.

Those of you with robust memories may remember where a lot of the collectibles and goals on the maps are because, as this is a faithful remake, they obviously haven’t moved. If you recall where Ollie the Magic Bum disappears to each time you jump over him I guess you may find yourself going through the motions a bit, but it’s difficult to fault Vicarious Visions for sticking to the originals.

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One place where the remake goes beyond the original road map is that new challenges have been added to the THPS1 levels to make them consistent with the longer lists in the THPS2 ones. This freshens things up a little while they last, but the biggest boost comes from the absolutely exhaustive list of overarching challenges that can be completed across any of the maps at any time, from certain strings of tricks to specific enormous points totals. Completing these ties into a new, overall leveling system that earns you unique decks, plus cash to drop on other gear for your skaters in the store. Many I achieved by accident, though others I completed after spotting them while shuffling through the menus. Especially on the first run through, THPS1+2 feels like one of those games where you’re always achieving something, whether you know it or not. Returning veterans will probably have every map unlocked within a day or so, but with 21 challenges for each of the 21 pros plus several hundred extra challenges on top of those, I can’t really begin to estimate how many hours of play there are here. Chuck in multiplayer and the much-enhanced create-a-park tools and it may be endless, especially as parks can be shared online.

I predict that some players of a certain vintage may end up a bit anesthetized to all the pop-up notifications and flashy bonus-collection-button-mashing – I know I became a bit numb to it – but I wouldn’t say it compromises any of what’s great here. If you just want to hop in and play through some incredible-looking maps from THPS1 and THPS2 – whether you’re looking to chill, chase scores, or chuck a controller around between some friends, THPS1+2 will satisfy. But if you want to devote yourself to chasing over 700 challenges across every skater and earn boards and other booty, THPS1+2 can most certainly supply that. There are no microtransactions and everything in the game can be unlocked via gameplay.

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G.O.A.T.

Despite sticking with tradition in terms of the maps, the default controls are actually more akin to those in THPS3 and THPS4 rather than the first two games. But before you freak out, know that the more limited, original movesets are available to toggle on for purists who crave an experience precisely like the original games – removing things like reverts, wallplants, and even manuals if you want – but I’m enjoying the default controls as they are. I have a lot of love for EA’s Skate and I’m fascinated by Skater XL’s technicality, but there’s also a lot to be said for THPS1+2’s big combos and pure arcade thrills and spills.

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For the young or inexperienced who may find all of this a bit too frantic and unforgiving there are cheats that can be activated to make things easier, though those scores are tracked separately so your kids or your grandma won’t be able to completely overwrite your greatest no-assist accomplishments. If you’re concerned about the presence of such a crutch, remember: this is a game from the ’90s, and the only thing more ’90s than video game cheats are acid-wash jeans and the soundtrack to Batman Forever.

Speaking of soundtracks, the famous THPS music selection is virtually all present and accounted for, and that’s perfect because it’s such an indisputably integral part of the original games. Vicarious Visions has also augmented it with a well-curated list of old and newer tracks, so it’s now doubly longer than it was originally. You can toggle them off if you want but, while not all the newer songs are to my taste, several are pretty good. For instance, I’d never heard of Rough Francis before THPS1+2, but these guys are awesome. Exposing me to new songs that will go on regular rotation in my car for the next few decades is exactly what Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater games did back in the late ’90s and early 2000s, and THPS1+2 is doing it all over again. Impressively, THPS1+2 hasn’t just captured the spirit of the originals in terms of the meticulously rebuilt maps and faithful feel – it’s done it in subtler ways like this, too.

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No Man’s Sky Developer Is Working On A New “Huge” Game

Hello Games has been very busy since the release of No Man’s Sky, updating the game so extensively that GameSpot has reviewed it three times, increasing the score from a 7/10 to a 9/10 along the way. The studio has recently released The Last Campfire, a smaller adventure with no planetary exploration. Now the studio is looking to the future, and work on a new, bigger game has begun.

Talking to Polygon, Hello Games studio founder Sean Murray has talked about what the company is doing now, saying that they’re working on “a huge, ambitious game,” similar to No Man’s Sky. Murray, who used to work at EA and developed “lots of sequels,” is keen to make another exciting project, saying that Hello Games formed to make the games they “always wanted to make”.

Murray says that No Man’s Sky came about as the result of “a little bit of a midlife crisis,” and that The Last Campfire was made by just three people (the studio is made up of 26 employees). Half of the remainder of the team has been working on the team’s next project, which is meant to be a big one.

Murray also reflects on the path No Man’s Sky took to release in the article, saying he’s glad how things ended up with the game after a rocky beginning. “Where we’ve ended up with the game, where we have hundreds of millions of hours played and a really happy community and all of that kind of thing, you know, I’m OK with that deal that we did,” he says.

“I reckon about half of what we did–and a lot of where we had problems, I think, where we were naive–we didn’t really need to do and we would have had the same level of success,” he reflects on the game’s early press opportunities. “A lot of opportunities were put in front of us, and we were told that they were the right things to do and I look back and I’m not sure that they were super, super important to the overall outcome kind of thing.”

Murray does not share any specifics of the next project, and judging from these quotes, it might be a while before Hello Games reveals it.

The latest major update to No Man’s Sky was Desolation, which added spooky abandoned spacecraft to the game.

Now Playing: No Man’s Sky – Exo Mech Trailer

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Shin Megami Tensei 3 HD Shows Off Upgraded Visuals In New Trailer Ahead Of Japanese Launch

Shin Megami Tensei III: Nocture first released for PS2 in 2004, and now a HD remaster is coming to PS4 and Switch. We’ve gotten glimpses of the new version before, and now a new Japanese trailer shows off the game’s updated visuals.

The game is coming to Japan on October 29, and will release in the rest of the world in spring 2021. This is the game’s second trailer, following the game’s reveal during a Nintendo Direct Mini.

The trailer also shows off Dante from Devil May Cry, who returns for this version. He appeared in the original PS2 release, too.

This isn’t a full remake, so visually the game looks pretty close to the original PS2 version, albeit prettied up.

RPG fans with a Switch also have Shin Megami Tensei V to look forward to. The game is releasing in 2021 around the world.

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Call Of Duty: Black Ops Cold War — New Details On Jason Hudson Released

After sharing more details about the Call of Duty: Black Ops character Frank Woods, developers Treyarch and Raven Software have now, as promised, shed some new light on another major character in the game, Jason Hudson.

Hudson plays a major role in Black Ops Cold War. On January 17, 1981, Hudson partners with his old friend Russell Adler to create an “elite team of operatives” who seek out to hunt down a nefarious Soviet enemy, known as Perseus.

Here is the official description for Hudson’s involvement in Black Ops Cold War:

“On January 17th, 1981, Hudson calls upon his old colleague, Russell Adler, to form an elite team of operatives in the pursuit of a dangerous Soviet agent. Although he doesn’t fully trust him and disagrees with some of his more unconventional methods, Hudson knows that if anyone has the personal motivation to see this task through to its conclusion, it’s Adler.”

Russell Adler is a brand-new character for the Call of Duty series. Played by Bruce Thomas, who portrayed Batman in a series of US commercials for OnStar in the early 2000s, Adler is a CIA agent who is part of the group trying to take down Perseus. We got our first glimpse at Adler in Black Ops Cold War video above where he meets with Ronald Reagan to discuss the plan to stop Perseus.

Hudson was voiced by the Oscar-nominated actor Ed Harris in the original Black Ops, before another Oscar-nominated actor, Michael Keaton, replaced him in Black Ops II. Hudson was only mentioned in Black Ops III and 4. There is no word on who is voicing Hudson in Black Ops Cold War, but we do know that the roles of Woods and Mason have been recast.

Treyarch and Raven will release more details on Adler and other characters in Black Ops Cold War later this week.

Now Playing: Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War Full Presentation | Gamescom 2020

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All Of Astro’s Gaming Headsets Are Compatible With PS5 And Xbox Series X

Microsoft has already stated the Xbox Series X will support all third-party Xbox One accessories, but as far as the PS5 goes, it’s been a little unclear which ones will be compatible. Thankfully, one company has cleared up the confusion for its gaming headset line. Astro Gaming announced that all of its headsets will be compatible with PS5 and Xbox Series X as well as PS4 and Xbox One, though some may require a firmware update to work with the next-gen consoles.

Both the PS5 and Xbox Series X will work with Astro’s A10, A20 Wireless, A40, A40 TR, and A50 Wireless gaming headsets. As for pre-amps, the MixAmp Pro TR will work with both PS5 and Xbox Series X, while the Xbox Series X will also support the MixAmp M60 and MixAmp M80–the latter two MixAmps are designed specifically for the Xbox One controller.

While Astro’s C40 TR is one of the best PS4 controllers you can buy, it won’t be compatible with PS5 games. It will, however, work with any PS4 games on the new console, thanks to backward compatibility. The best Xbox One controllers, on the other hand, will be fully compatible with the Xbox Series X.

Unfortunately, we still don’t have a PS5 or Xbox Series X release date or price, though it is expected for them both to launch in November. Sony recently started taking PS5 pre-order reservations, and if you haven’t already, you should definitely sign up. Microsoft recently stated they’ll announce an Xbox Series X price and release date “when [they’re] ready.”

Mulan Will Be Available On Disney Plus At No Extra Cost In December

Disney’s new Mulan film comes to Disney Plus this Friday, September 4, but it’s not included with the standard subscription price. Instead, it costs $30 USD on its own to stream through a “Premier Access” program.

If you’re willing to wait a few months, you can stream the movie at no extra cost on Disney Plus when it arrives on the platform for everyone in December. This was revealed through an updated page on the Disney Plus website, as first spotted by The Verge.

The “Premier Access” offer for Mulan will be available until November 2. Starting on December 4, Disney will let all subscribers watch the movie for no extra cost.

Reviews for Mulan will begin to appear online this Thursday, September 3, so keep checking back for more on the film. We also recently learned that “tens of thousands” of people auditioned for the role of Mulan in the film, while a producer on the project also spoken about how the unique release strategy for Mulan may affect the movie business going forward.

In other news about Disney Plus, The Mandalorian Season 2 will arrive on the streaming service on October 30.

Pokemon Go September Community Day: Shiny Porygon, Event Move, And More

September is another busy month for Pokemon Go players. Niantic has a variety of events and activities lined up for the game over the next few weeks, from the Mega Evolution-themed Mega September event to a new Victini Special Research. There’s also September’s Community Day, which takes place on Sunday, September 20. To help you prepare for the event, we’ve rounded up everything you need to know about September’s Community Day below.

September’s Featured Pokemon: Porygon

Porygon
Porygon

The Virtual Pokemon Porygon is the featured Pokemon for September’s Community Day. Throughout the event, Porygon will spawn in the wild much more frequently than normal, making this a good opportunity to stock up on Porygon Candy. On top of that, you’ll be able to catch a Shiny Porygon in the game for the first time during the event.

September’s Community Day Move: Tri Attack

If you can evolve Porygon2 (Porygon’s evolved form) into Porygon-Z up to two hours after September’s Community Day ends, it’ll learn the event-exclusive move Tri Attack. This marks the first time this attack will be available in Pokemon Go, and it’s a useful one; in addition to dealing damage, Tri Attack has a chance of lowering the opposing Pokemon’s Attack and Defense stats.

September Community Day Hours

Like the past few Community Days, this month’s event will run for six hours instead of the traditional three, from 11 AM to 5 PM local time. That gives you until 7 PM local time to evolve Porygon2 into Porygon-Z and learn Tri Attack.

Community Day Special Research

Niantic is offering an event-exclusive Special Research story called “Decoding Porygon” during September’s Community Day. Tickets to access the Research story will go on sale soon in Pokemon Go’s in-game shop for $1 USD.

Other Bonuses

In addition to increased Porygon spawns, a few other bonuses will be available during September’s Community Day. First, any Incense that you use will remain active for three hours instead of the usual 30 minutes. You’ll also receive triple the normal amount of XP for catching Pokemon during the event. Finally, Niantic will be selling a Community Day bundle that costs 1,280 PokeCoins and includes the following items:

  • 1 Elite Fast TM
  • 3 Incense
  • 6 Lucky Eggs
  • 30 Ultra Balls

How To Evolve Porygon

In addition to Porygon Candy, both Porygon and Porygon2 require certain items to evolve. You’ll need to have an Upgrade to evolve Porygon into Porygon2, while Porygon2 requires a Sinnoh Stone to evolve into Porygon-Z. These are typically scarce, but you’ll have multiple chances to obtain them ahead of September’s Community Day.

During Week 2 of the Mega September event, you’ll be able to earn an Upgrade and a Sinnoh Stone by completing that week’s Timed Research. You’ll also be able to get up to three Upgrades and Sinnoh Stones by completing Timed Research during the Community Day, with additional ones available through the Decoding Porygon Research story.

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Tell Me Why Review – Cleaning Out My Closet

There’s an important milestone in every adult’s life when they realize that their parents aren’t just monolithic figures known only as Mom and/or Dad, but people in their own right who have hopes, dreams, thoughts, and desires that have nothing to do with their children. That’s not exactly new territory in other art, but it’s a rarity in games. In the few that do explore that idea, it’s usually Dad who gets the attention. That makes Dontnod’s Tell Me Why a fascinating anomaly right off the bat. It is, without question, a shattered portrait of a single mother, pieced back together by those who knew her best. The framework of the game screams narrative murder-mystery, but the game takes a Knives Out approach to that; the question of who killed Mary-Ann Ronan is answered by the end of the first episode. Why she died is a far more complex question, and the answers depending on unreliable, traumatic memories throws another wrench into the mix.

The memories in question mostly belong to Mary-Ann’s twin children, Tyler and Alyson. The facts from the start are these: Mary-Ann and her kids live in a tiny middle-of-nowhere town in Alaska called Delos Crossing. The family is poor, relying on handouts from other folks in town, while all the entertainment comes from either nature itself or Mary-Ann’s fantastical imagination teaching her kids how to tell stories with and to each other. Over time, however, Mary-Ann’s mental health deteriorates, culminating in a fateful night where Mary-Ann suffers some sort of mental break and attacks Tyler, who is later accused of killing her in self-defense. Tyler is sent away to live in a group home, while Alyson is taken in by a family friend, a cop named Eddy. Fifteen years later, Tyler and Alyson finally reunite to go back to their old house and clear it out to be sold, only to unearth some harrowing truths about their mother and their hometown–and everyone’s roles in how Mary-Ann died.

There are quite a few mysteries to be unraveled in Tell Me Why, but calling Tell Me Why a mystery suggests the game is more action-packed, twisty, and turny than it actually is. It’s actually closer in tone and mechanics to Fullbright’s Gone Home than Dontnod’s own Life Is Strange. There’s still quite a lot of Life Is Strange in this game’s blood, though. Most of Tell Me Why involves simply walking around, pressing A when you come close to anything highlighted to hear characters expound on a particular object and continue the story, making dialogue choices for characters along the way. The developers’ design ethos is familiar, they’re excellent at making towns and communities that are awash in detail, places that feel rich, lived-in, and full of history and culture. That’s particularly special in Tell Me Why, given the cultures represented here that are rarely if ever presented with this kind of TLC, if they’ve ever been presented at all. In particular, the way the indigenous Tlingit tribe is simply woven into the fabric of Delos Crossing, and doesn’t call out to itself as exotic or foreign is just excellent. There’s much to be said about the existence of The Other being portrayed not as a strange curiosity, but a fact of life in a narrative.

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The issue with Tell Me Why is that it occupies an awkward space where it actually doesn’t scale things back enough. It’s a game that doesn’t quite know what to do with itself when it’s not giving you characters to converse with or story-advancing items to examine. There’s just so much meandering around with item collection, random chores, and puzzle-solving–none of which are terribly difficult or tricky, but neither are they particularly engaging, or fun, or even germane to the larger plot. The game hits the sweet spot occasionally. A sequence where Tyler and Alyson have to sneak into the police department archives and piece together a complete record of the night their mom died before someone actually shows up has a nice bit of tension to it. There just aren’t enough sequences like that to justify how much legwork it takes to advance things along.

The game is at its strongest when it leans into its best mechanic: The twins’ mildly psychic powers, because a Dontnod game isn’t complete without a supernatural hook. They can talk to each other and share/visualize memories without speaking. More often than not, the game uses it in a way you’d expect from exploration games of this sort: When you’re walking around the house or other locations, a particular area or object creates a hazy visual re-enactment of the twins’ childhood memories. Tell Me Why goes a step further than just using them to convey exposition–these memories are hazy because they, like real memories, aren’t reliable. Many of the big choices in the game revolve around how selective memory can be, choosing which version of a moment to believe and why, and what believing a certain version of a story can do to a relationship. That’s rather powerful given the intense emotional nature of much of the game, and has Dontnod returning to a more thoughtful method of branching decisions we haven’t seen it dig into since 2013’s still-underappreciated Remember Me.

The main issue is there’s just not enough gameplay-wise that exists on that level. There are maybe two moments that might qualify as action quick-time events; one’s a fishing mini-game, and the other involves helping Alyson slow her breathing during an anxiety attack. The dialogue choices are very often binary, changing the mood of a conversation rather than the drastic changes your decisions in Life Is Strange can bring on. Despite a murder being at the center of the game, what passes for big “J’ACCUSE!” moments often come down to rather melancholy scenes of regret and emotional honesty, with the major choice often coming down to whether to forgive someone or not.

On its face that doesn’t sound like a game-breaking negative, and really it isn’t; Tell Me Why eschews high stakes in favor of emotional payoff, which can be just as gratifying in the right hands. There just isn’t enough of it in this game to justify a three part series of episodes three hours long, and the game reaches catharsis at such a languid pace, each episode feels much longer. Tell Me Why runs in circles around the same emotional touchstones for too long for much of its play time, and it takes its sweet time getting to the point of any given scene when the facts we need to know about each character have either been well-established or easily guessed.

Having said that, when Tell Me Why does have a point to make with the less crucial plot points, it’s in favor of giving depth and shading to all the things that we should see more of in games, especially when it comes to how it portrays indigenous cultures, religion, sexuality, mental illness and yes, as the game is extremely eager (and rightfully so) to remind us, the presentation of mainstream gaming’s first playable trans protagonist. Tyler Ronan, in particular, is indeed a revelation. The fact of his gender is played as a simple facet of his life, and not the source or byproduct of any of the game’s varying traumas. Tyler is allowed to simply exist in this game, as a complete human being, just like every other character in it.

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It’s commendable keeping Tyler’s gender out of the conversation when it comes to this game’s primary conflict, but it creates a bit of a vacuum in the plot. It’s a story in search of an edge, of a more effective conflict, of something to truly hurt so the healing lands better. There’s a softness to the core plot of this game, despite the death and pain at the center of it, one that leans heavily into absolving the support systems that failed Mary-Ann Ronan and left her two children damaged. The game seems dedicated to never letting any trace of evil creep into the narrative. It’s an extraordinarily grounded, restrained story, which makes the elements that don’t give our protagonists the answers they seek feel more like wheel-spinning. The puzzles and collection bits that are typically the bread and butter of this type of game make an awkward fit with the rest of the narrative. It’s a game of so much empathy and respect it can’t stand to see its characters handle their flaws in any way but the best possible way, even when you make the choices that shun the people of Delos Crossing.

And even still, there’s something to be said for that type of story, one that allows players to explore heightened emotions with the blows that come so harsh in the real world, but padded and safe here. The saving grace of the game isn’t Tyler, though, as mentioned, his presence is a strong and welcome one. It’s actually Mary-Ann herself, one of video gaming’s scant few mothers and perhaps the one character allowed to be more than just her neuroses, her failures, or even her children. All the townspeople of Delos Crossing have their complexities, but there’s far more nuance in the things we learn about her over time, the tragic benefit of exploring her life in the past tense as opposed to every other character’s current state. Tell Me Why’s entire narrative hinges on completing our picture of Mary-Ann, and the promise the game makes and fulfills is that this person certainly lived a full but complicated life–and the messy end she meets is everyone’s burden to bear, whether they choose to carry it or not.

Mary-Ann reminds me a lot of Twin Peaks’ Laura Palmer, a girl known primarily as a victim. It’s only until the movie Fire Walk With Me that we know just how much was going on behind the eyes of that idyllic photograph we saw of her every episode. In Tell Me Why, our clearest, enduring image of Mary-Ann Ronan is the dead woman whose childrens’ lives were destroyed after her death. Finding out everything beautiful, intelligent, and loving that was going on behind those eyes is the most powerful thing in Tell Me Why, and matched in how her life created two strong, empathetic children who knew her well and didn’t even realize it. There’s a lot of empty disengaging space to be filled in in this game, but with a little patience and sympathy, what it does provide you is worth the effort.

Evergate Review – Ever Great

Evergate surprised me. It looked at first to be slightly derivative of Ori and the Blind Forest, and I became interested in it because of those similarities, not in spite of them. In actuality, its common traits with Ori are superficial, and its strong focus on the puzzle part of the puzzle-platformer genre makes for a rich and wholly distinct experience.

You play as Ki, a small wisp occupying the afterlife and awaiting reincarnation by journeying through the Evergate. When a crisis threatens to undo the entire afterlife itself, Ki assists by going through the Evergate to relive key memories throughout time and solve the mystery behind the looming disaster. If that concept sounds heady, it is. The game doesn’t give you much exposition to start, so you spend the first few hours piecing together the mythology at play. Characters freely throw out terms without explanation, and it’s on you to catch up.

The main gameplay hook bears a strong resemblance to one of the main platforming mechanics in the Ori games. In those, the “Bash” move lets you spring off objects in mid-air, shooting in a particular direction. Evergate uses the same basic concept, but plumbs the depths of it as a deep well of puzzle mechanics. The entire game is built around a series of nodes with different effects, as long as you have a clear line of sight to an ethereal white object or grounding. As you progress further, finding these sightlines and discovering the order of nodes to hit becomes increasingly complex–and often acrobatic, as you use a time-slowing mechanic to line up your shot in mid-air.

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The creativity of Evergate comes from seeing the wide variety of different nodes, referred to in-game as crystals, and how they can be used to create complex interlocking platforming puzzles. Your goal is always to reach a marked gate, but it is always well out of your reach or blocked by some obstacle. The platforming controls are simple but natural, as jumps carry just enough of a satisfying floatiness to match the wispy hero’s animations. But crystals are the key navigational tool, with greater stacking effects if you line up more than one at a time.

The most basic node shoots you off in a direction just like in Ori, while one might start a fire to burn down obstacles and another generates a circular gravity field that you can use to burst out from any angle. Each of the 10 worlds introduces a completely new and often wholly inventive puzzle mechanic, and eases you into learning its implications before combining it with the others you’ve previously seen. By the end, you’ve become a bona fide expert in the effects of each crystal, and it’s very satisfying to plan a route through a stage’s obstacles, springing between nodes and barely touching the ground.

Evergate is a puzzle-platformer at heart, though, and it takes the second half of that designation just as seriously. Planning your route is nothing without execution. As you progress into the later stages, even once you know the solution, it takes a certain degree of precision to solve the stage and reach the exit. It’s in those moments that the finely tuned controls feel especially welcome. I failed stages more times than I can count, but it was always my own fault by missing the moment by a hair.

By nature of its platforming roots, Evergate also feels remarkably improvisational. Puzzle games are often designed with specific solutions in mind, and in broad strokes you can see how some of these stages have a particular flow as well. But sometimes you’ll discover a path that obviously wasn’t the intended one, riffing your way through nodes like a jazz musician, and the systems are flexible enough to let you. There are no power-ups or character progression, so at the start of any stage you always have everything you could possibly need.

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The 10 worlds are various memories scattered throughout time, telling the story of two souls who are linked, but the story is only half-successful. Evergate aims to be a poignant fable about how the people we love can disappoint us, and that we need to be patient and kind in an attempt to see the world through their eyes to understand how we’ve disappointed them as well. When it delivers on this message through dialogue, it actually is very sweet. But the majority of the story is told through brief animated vignettes, and it’s not always completely clear what’s happening in them. Between the lack of clarity in those story sequences and the en media res presentation of the lore, it’s difficult to connect with the characters or conflict until the game is nearly over.

The environments themselves are also less differentiated than you might imagine for a game that spans from Chinese gardens to a neon near-future. Part of that is a product of the puzzle elements, which need to retain some visual language across multiple stages. The backgrounds are suitably differentiated, but since your focus is on the platforming, it doesn’t feel much like traveling to different time periods. The clearest exception is the future, which introduces elements like drone robots and force fields that dampen your abilities.

On the whole, though, Evergate is remarkably clever. It’s a short and sweet treat of a game that constantly invents new ways to interact with the world and to blend game elements together, making for a satisfying test of brainpower and reflexes.