Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom has, at its core, two very different movies fighting for dominance. One is the modern mediocre action movie, with its clichéd, easy-to-predict one-liners and bland, slightly-stubbled leading man and elaborately choreographed yet snore-inducing hand-to-hand combat sequences. The other is a genuinely deep and compelling iteration on the series it carries on—a series that has rarely managed to capture any of the magic of Spielberg's original masterpiece, but here comes the closest it ever has to understanding what made that first movie so good.
Tag: characters
How Doki Doki Literature Club Paints an (Almost) Authentic Picture of Depression
From one angle, Team Salvato's (free) visual novel Doki Doki Literature Club looks like an attempt to capture a bit of Undertale's signature metafictional magic. A game that begins as a piece in a well-defined genre ends up being anything but—picking apart both the mechanical and narrative tropes that a player might expect from, respectively, a visual … Continue reading How Doki Doki Literature Club Paints an (Almost) Authentic Picture of Depression
You Might Have Missed: Rune Factory 2
A game’s qualifications for this loosely-defined series of mine usually begin and end with my belief that not enough people have played it. And while Rune Factory 2 is far from an indie game, I doubt the cross-section of audiences that enjoy both intensive dungeon crawling and Harvest Moon-style farming-and-relationship simulators is all that large. … Continue reading You Might Have Missed: Rune Factory 2
A Reading: The Shared Trauma of Life is Strange and Ocarina of Time
Each episode of Dontnod Entertainment's Life is Strange begins with a disclaimer—that you, the player, are about to make choices that will affect the characters' past, present, and future. And while the latter two seem like common sense in a branching path game, the first made me wonder. Was I about to see that storied … Continue reading A Reading: The Shared Trauma of Life is Strange and Ocarina of Time