Returnal review | PC Gamer

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The hero of Returnal standing in front of a blue laser beam.


NEED TO KNOW

 What is it? A roguelike third-person shooter with a strong bullet hell lineage. 

Expect to pay: £50 / $60

Developer: Housemarque

Publisher: PlayStation PC 

Reviewed on: 64-bit Windows 10, Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080, AMD Ryzen 9 5900X, 32GB RAM

Multiplayer: Co-op only

Link: Steam page (opens in new tab)

In 1996, Housemarque released Super Stardust (opens in new tab), and for two decades it honed the top down arcade shooter. In 2017, it declared “ARCADE IS DEAD” (opens in new tab)—there was no money left in it, and the developer would be “moving on to new genres”. Returnal is the result, a big budget roguelike that kicks off a new era for the studio. The twist? It’s… basically an arcade shooter.

Okay, that’s a little unfair. Strictly speaking, it’s a third-person roguelike shooter—the camera tight over your shoulder, not high above, with runs progressing you through a shifting alien world, rather than being an opportunity to chase high scores. But the more you play, the more it feels like a wolf in sheep’s clothing, using some of the trappings of a popular modern genre to smuggle in the gameplay Housemarque is more known for. It’s a game with one foot in the studio’s past and another in its future—and, despite the game’s strengths, that’s not always a comfortable position to stand in.

(Image credit: Housemarque)

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Things kick off with an astronaut—Selene—crash-landing on the alien planet of Atropos. After some fraught encounters with the hostile wildlife, she discovers she’s trapped in a time loop—if she dies, she simply wakes up again at the crash site. And not only that, but she’s been trapped for a lot longer than she remembers, a fact chillingly proved by the frequent discoveries of her own past corpses, complete with audio logs full of the crazed ramblings of her past lives. It’s a perfect narrative set-up for a roguelike, contextualising your repeated runs through Atropos’ dangerous levels as part of a continuous story—similar to Deathloop (opens in new tab) or particularly Hades (opens in new tab).



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