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Blackwood Crossing is a story-driven first-person adventure game. A haunting tale of intrigue and mystery.
You play as Scarlett, a teenager finding her way in the world. You wake up, disorientated, to find yourself and your younger brother, Finn, inexpl...
Blackwood Crossing is a story-driven first-person adventure game. A haunting tale of intrigue and mystery.
You play as Scarlett, a teenager finding her way in the world. You wake up, disorientated, to find yourself and your younger brother, Finn, inexplicably travelling on a moving train.
But when a mysterious figure appears, it’s clear that this is no ordinary train ride. It’s the beginning of a magical voyage, steeped in life, love and loss.
Navigating this powerful drama - where the world, and your abilities develop in extraordinary ways - you are forced to examine your relationship with Finn. You are orphans, and your relationship has always been strong. However, adolescence has opened the door to new interests, and you’ve been growing apart.
As you gradually uncover the depths of Finn’s anguish, the consequences of your remoteness become shockingly clear.
A story-driven first person adventure game
A mysterious adventure of life, love and loss.
The player completes a series of puzzles during the game to drive the narrative forward, in first-person view.
Blackwood Crossing. Copyright 2017 by Paperseven Vision 1 Ltd. All rights reserved. Published and distributed by Vision Games Publishing LTD.
Interesting little story. A bit shorter than I'd like and mildly annoyed that the 'screenshots's aren't really that at all - the protagonist is shown in full in the above images, but she's only really visible in window reflections while in-game. - It's entirely first-person.
The various visual effects were well done, and the story well written. Definitely recommend.
Nice game. Short (about three hours long) and quite easy, story-driven adventure game. Nice visuals. Oneiric, magical atmosphere. Clunky gameplay. Riddles are somewhat repeatable and a bit annoying because of slow movement (but there are also some nice ones). After all, I recommend it, but you should wait for a discount. It's a very nice and touching experience but not really worth the full price.
"If this is a dream... I need to eat less cheese." First paragraph will be me venting: This game's controls and camera are so wonky I had to stop playing at times when I started getting queasy. The interactive hotspots are awkward enough that hitting them is harder than the game's actual puzzles. On my second playthrough, some piece of terrain failed to load causing me to fall through the map; even rebooting didn't fix it, and since there's only one checkpoint save and no chapter select, that meant starting all over. Which is a tad annoying, not least since even running after her brother, Scarlett sneaks about on tiptoe, and control is frequently taken away from you when the game thinks Scarlett needs to look at or comment on something. Oh, and the game writes hundreds of megs of debug logs to AppData, so if you're from the era of small boot SSDs, enjoy.
That said, this game scores when it comes to story and characters. Portrayal of Scarlett is serviceable, even if she remains something of a flat character on the whole- and did we wear jeans slit at the knees back in the 90s? Finn, though, feels real, round and tragically awesome, and both of their voice actors, Rosie Jones and Kit Connor, are the life and blood of this game, complete with their British accents. The richly detailed levels do well at the daunting task of staging two creative kids, Finn's quirky papermache art represented especially well. The story is real, honest, with no false pathos even in its tearjerker moments, so if you're into narrative games, chances are these 2-3 hours will work for you.
It feels wrong giving this three stars. With its colourful surrealism and tender profundity, I feel this game might be a good fit for people Scarlett's age when they're ready to explore things like loss, selfhood, family. However, there are smoother and more accomplished narrative PC games out there. Perhaps get it on a console? Or buy it and then watch a Let's Play?
The movement in the game is horrendous, causing MAJOR motion sickness. The save system in practically non-existent! Can't get anywhere in the game due to these two issues.
Every inch of this game is beautiful. It is a very well made game. The art direction, voice actors and animation is really amazing. This stuff looks and feels better than a lot of AAA games!!