11/25/2023 0 Comments Jotun valhalla edition reviewThe only change is perhaps the distance from our eyes to the screen, so planning for that scale shift is perhaps slightly necessary. The games’s meat and potatoes, the one-on-one battles between Thora and giant jotun, haven’t been lessened in difficulty for the influx of new players. The jotun themselves are perhaps even more monstrous and imposing this way. While we see these details on computer monitors, there’s still something kind of awe-inspiring when on a big screen. On my decent 55-inch TV the colors are vibrant and the contrast is terrific, making for the kind of artwork that causes us to pause a game, get up from our couches and walk up to see details even closer. The imagery is all hand-drawn, and looks beautiful on screens 42 inches and bigger. The striking visuals are one of the aspects of Jotun that have become better now that the game is on consoles. If one path is too arduous or battle too laborious, we can back out to the hub and try another. The worlds themselves aren’t actually all that huge, but smart design makes us believe they’re bigger than they are. The game unfolds a bit like a difficult Mega Man game, in which we can take on the game’s six worlds in any order we deem best and capture that world’s jotun’s powers. She needs to defeat jotun, mythic Norse giants, in order to impress the gods and make it into Valhalla. Taking place from an overhead view, we follow Thora as she explores the world around her. But, death is just part of the learning process we tweak our strategies, take a different path, and try again until we figure out how to push forward. As protagonist Thora, we die often while we traverse poisonous swamps or face monolithic beasts. Jotun plays like a 16-bit era action exploration game, exposing players to seemingly huge worlds and difficult challenges. It’s not a horribly difficult game, but it does demand a classic sense of dedication. Now that it has, the port is as faithful as possible, skipping and skimping on nothing in the process and including the Valhalla mode that was subsequently added to the game. When Thunder Lotus Games released Jotun on Steam last year, fans almost instantly craved to see it come to consoles. In fact thanks to seeing the game on bigger screens and with more controller options, we’re more confident than ever to recommend the gem. In our Steam review of Jotun, we mentioned that the game was “unmistakably polished” and a “meditation on scale.” A year later, and on new platforms, that hasn’t changed.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |