Titan Station is a single-player first-person mystery set in a retro-sci fi universe.
Far into the future, in the year 1999: David, a systems operator, runs from his troubles by taking a job on a space station. After arriving, his mundane work turns into a struggle for his very life as he makes a sh...
Windows 10 or higher, I5 2.3Ghz, 8 GB RAM, DX12 3GB VRAM, Version 12, 6 GB available space, Requires...
介绍
Titan Station is a single-player first-person mystery set in a retro-sci fi universe.
Far into the future, in the year 1999: David, a systems operator, runs from his troubles by taking a job on a space station. After arriving, his mundane work turns into a struggle for his very life as he makes a shocking discovery.
Escape all your troubles by taking a job at an isolated refueling depot.
Titan station is connected to Saturns moon Titan by an elevator and pipeline system.
Talk on the radio
Meet and talk to others over radio, but who can you trust?
Use retro computers
Connect to the network and find the truth.
Go into Cyberspace
Desperate times call for desperate measures.
A narrative adventure
Titan Station takes around 3-4 hours to complete.
There is no combat.
Few puzzles - easy and part of the story.
Solo developer
Titan Station is developed in Unreal Engine by one person - Joakim Larsen, a 3D artist who worked on Overkill's 'The Walking Dead,' Paradox's 'Stellaris' and 'Hearts of Iron,' and DICE's 'Battlefield 4.'
I liked it, it was fun. I've no complains at all for a game of this kind. I recommend it.
It really needs a way to settle the FOV but the fix available out there for ultrawide did the trick.
After eyeing it for some time, I finally decied to give Titan Station a chance. It's a walking sim where you play as David, a blue collar worker who is heavily in debt to various loan sharks and therefor takes a job as a technician on Titan Station, a space station orbiting the Jupiter moon of Titan. The regular crew is missing and David is directed by the station manager to do various tasks only to be drawn in to an increasingly complicated plot about a rogue AI and the usual existential questions that any self-respecting walking sim throws at you instead of, you know, more interactive gameplay.
Titan Station does have some (easy) puzzles to handle but besides that it's walking and talking with the help of a, well, walkie-talkie. A game with such meager offerings regarding gameplay needs to absolutely nail the story, presentation and overall ambience to compensate and Titan Station manages mostly: the retro sci-fi setting works great and the game is visually impressive when you consider it's a one man creation. The voice acting isn't too great though: the actors do a good job but sadly, the delivery of their lines aren't always in harmony with the plot - although the story leans increasingly on horror-esque themes that would rationally make David terrified and in a panic, his mood seems to swing wildly with some lines being told with a relaxed confidence that isn't exactly fitting an isolated man going through a personal crisis while also fearing for his life.
All in all, I enjoyed Titan Station and while not being perfect, it's worth a playthrough!