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Robert Foster is an innocent outsider stranded in a vast city where oppressed civilians live and work in soaring tower blocks... while the corrupt, covetous and rich lie underground, shielded from all pollution. Alone, save for a robot circuit board, Fo...
Robert Foster is an innocent outsider stranded in a vast city where oppressed civilians live and work in soaring tower blocks... while the corrupt, covetous and rich lie underground, shielded from all pollution. Alone, save for a robot circuit board, Foster must fight for survival... and discover the sinister truth behind his abduction...
Paranoid population. Psychotic criminals. Power hungry corporation. Big Brother government. Haves and have nots.
In the not so impossible future. In the melting pot of Union City. All man's social problems are coming to a boil. Under the claustrophobic lid of a steel sky.
From the pit of the industrial level to the belly of commercial sector, to the spheres where the rich and powerful play. It's Man against Man. Man against Machine. Man against Time. In an urban hell only you can liberate... Maybe.
Featuring Revolution's Software innovative Virtual Theatre system, Beneath a Steel Sky is a gripping science fiction point and click adventure game in the cyberpunk genre.
Over 100 locations designed and art directed by award-winning comic book author Dave Gibbons (Watchmen fame). His comic book, inspired by the game itself, is included to complete the content.
A claustrophobic, paranoid and psychotic atmosphere
Over 100 locations designed by an English comic book artist and writer Dave Gibbons
Many interesting characters that move about freely and live out their own lives, thanks to the Virtual Theatre system
The story, the humor, the charm, everything about this game was great. All wrapped up into a nice neat world that really makes you feel for everything that happens. All I can say now is, get this game.
The trouble with Beneath a Steel Sky is that it feels like a patchwork of fragments from different good adventure games, which fit together poorly to make a playable but inconsistently enjoyable game.
You've got death sequences...but not enough of them for there to be any reliable sense of consequence to your actions. The overall feel of the game is generally fairly serious, with some especially dark moments, yet there are out-of-the-blue moments of goofball comedy that are completely incongruous with the rest of the game. The challenge factor of the puzzles fluctuates wildly; sometimes the puzzles are intuitive and downright easy, while other times it won't even be apparent that there's a puzzle at all.
If you're up for an adventure game featuring a dystopian cyberpunk society with a complex storyline, BASS is at least worth a look. It's just difficult to recommend the game with any real enthusiasm because of how disruptive the inconsistencies are.
The core of this game is a relatively routine adventure game with its share of fun, if illogical puzzles that often get solved only because the options at any point are so restricted. But that's really not important because the characters are all so real. Every person has an interesting story (even those that won't tell it to you have an interesting spark to them). The voice acting is top-notch, too. The artwork and the feel of the world is really great, although it would have been nice to see something a touch more expansive.
I'd rate it higher but I do feel the gameplay could have been better and it is possible to run into a bug (as I did). The game's not super tough to blow through if you need to restart. Just don't do that the first time or you'll miss out on the best part of it.
I only now discovered this game through GOG and it's fantastic. The atmosphere and humor is great and even tho the game is from 1994 it really stood the test of time. I'll give it 4/5 but judging as if it came out today. If I played it back in the day I'd easily give it 5/5