Review: “The story relies on modern-day misfit tropes for a bit too long, and hides some genuine late surprises that turned my opinion around almost completely,” Gene Park writes.
“So let me get this straight: I’m somewhere that’s not what I would call Earth,” that’s Whedonspeak. It’s a phenomenon that plagues many films of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. This type of speak was also common for Nathan Drake, the protagonist of the “Uncharted” series, which shares the same writer as “Forspoken,” Amy Hennig. So it’s not really a surprise it appears here too.The story is riddled with cliches.
First of all, there just aren’t a lot of action-adventure games about spellcasting wizards, even fewer with a Black woman in the lead role, and “Forspoken” offers, at the very least, this. And you get to gather and wear colorful flowing capes, do cool kick flips, twirl and spin like a ballerina, and race across fantasy lands with superpowered kicks like Sonic the Hedgehog. Frey is an engaging, fun hero to be.
Movement and traversal are also highlights, as Frey blazes through the landscape with magically enchanted sneakers. She can quickly earn more power to her move set, as she’s later able to kick off cliffsides and walls to climb higher up and jump across long distances. Movement also makes the large-scale battles more dynamic, as the biggest encounters take place in huge battlefields. Frey is able to block and dodge enemy attacks.
There’s not much to say about the open-world gameplay that hasn’t been said with every other game of this type. The map is large and cavernous, and beautifully designed, but it’s just scattered with waypoints for activities. Don’t get too excited about the “dungeon” areas: They’re all cut-and-paste hallways and combat rooms with treasure chests, never deviating from a very bland format.
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