Monday, April 1, 2013

Journey

I had many people tell me that I should play Journey. I didn't realize what type of game it was until I went to the session on designing Journey by Jenova Chen at GDC13. After I got back home, I bought it and beat it in the same day.


The controls are extremely simple. The left thumbstick moves your character. Tilting the controller or using the right thumbstick turns the camera. Pressing O will put out a small ping with a symbol indicating your name. Holding down O will put out a stronger ping. Pinging is mainly for activating world objects. When powered up you can fly briefly by pressing X. You can get powered up by touching the ribbons in the world, being pinged by another player, or colliding with another player.


The graphics were very good and stylized. There were large deserts with ruins scattered throughout, dark caves, temples, and frozen wastelands. The air physics on the ribbons in the world look really good, also the strong winds that push you back in the cold.

The music and sound affects are very good. The music beautifully sets the tone and the sound affects resonates the mood.

The game also has seamless coop. The way it works is it finds people in your area of the game, and seamlessly joins them into your game so you can see other people on their journey. I ran into a few different people near the start, but then I ran into someone about 10-15 minutes in that seemed to share my way of exploring the world and solving puzzles. Their name was a symbol that looked like two lowercase n's on top, and two vertical lines on the bottom, so that was my only indication that it was the same person.


I played with them to the completion of the game. When monsters were attacking one of us, the other instinctively ran to the other for support. When one of us was being blocked by harsh winds, the other would wait so we could carry on as a team. When we were trudging through the thick snow, forced to walk slower, and slower, the other was right there. There was nothing keeping us tied together except for the desire for us to travel together, and not brave it alone. At the end of the game, it tells you who the other symbols are, this person was SweetCupcake16. If you're out there, thanks.

Normally I would find something to complain about in a game, but I don't really have anything here. The game wasn't too short or too long. I got through it in roughly the time it takes to watch a long movie. On top, I always felt like I was progressing and seeing new things. The controls were concise, the graphics amazing, the sound brilliant.

I highly recommend playing this game. It was a great experience and well worth it. If you have a PS3 and haven't played this game yet, you need to get it right now.

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