![]() ![]() To its credit, Elderand‘s setting is delightfully grotesque. It’s just enough to make sure they remember to come back a little later on, although the fact that these obstacles aren’t marked on the map screen is inexcusable in this day and age.Īt this point it’s fundamentally it’s up to the player to define their experience – are they going to follow the quest markers through the main plot, or explore every nook and cranny of the levels? There’s no right answer, per se, and just like its inspiration, Elderand is simply packed with secrets for those determined enough to track them down. This 2D game establishes a setting – a corrupted kingdom (no surprise there) – then drops the player at the bottom of a map and lets them freely explore a dungeon, blocking a few pathways with doors that need to be broken or platforms that they can’t jump quite high enough to reach. The Metroid half of the title is a nod to the past, but mechanically it’s Symphony developers are copying, and it’s not accidental that the vast majority of them are melee-focused – developers just want to make Symphony of the Night again, to the point where the only significant change I’ve observed in the decades since its release is that enemies have largely stopped dropping weapons and started leaving crafting supplies behind when they die.Įlderand is a perfect example of this me-too phenomenon in action. The game was so iconic and so revolutionary that it spawned a quarter-century’s worth of imitators in a subgenre now commonly known as metroidvanias. ![]() There’s no shame, I would suggest, in just making Castlevania: Symphony of the Night over and over again. WTF Sacrificing people for gear is a disturbing mechanic! LOW How utterly broken the wasteland Brutes are. ![]()
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