Ori and the Will of the Wisps Review

Posted By: Ryan - March 20, 2020

It has beauty, it has grace, it will punch you in the face.   Ori and the Will of the Wisps is a charming, if mildly unforgiving, follow-up to Ori and the Blind Forest. I never played the first game much, metroidvanias aren’t usually my thing, but I continued to be intrigued by the art style and that intrigue led me to try out the sequel at launch on the Xbox One X, here is our Ori and the Will of the Wisps review. Vibrant col

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Gamers, join the fight against Coronavirus with your GPUs

Posted By: GamerDating Team - March 14, 2020

Coronavirus specific GPU projects are now available at folding@home. Last month Greg Bowman, CEO of Folding@Home stepped up and started adding research projects using the Folding at Home software. Folding@home is joining researchers around the world working to better understand the 2019 Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) to accelerate the open science effort to develop new life-saving therapies. By downloading Folding@Home, you can donate your unuse

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Our March rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - March 13, 2020

Temtem, Warhammer: Vermintide 2, Curse of the Dead Gods (early access), and due to popular demand we now have Ori and the Blind Forest: Definitive Edition It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games, restocked nearly all our previous c

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Our February rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - February 18, 2020

No Man's Sky, Jurassic World Evolution, Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice, Star Wars: Battlefront II, Monster Hunter: World, Darkest Dungeon and Ori and the Blind Forest It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games, restocked nearly all our

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Pokémon Home brings you cloud trading for all games

Posted By: GamerDating Team - January 28, 2020

New Pokémon Cloud Service App Can Manage Collection of Pokémon across Multiple Games   Today, The Pokémon Company International and Nintendo announced more details for the new cloud service app Pokémon HOME. The app enables Trainers to continue their Pokémon adventures beyond a single game system and manage their collection of Pokémon across many of their games.   Pokémon HOME w

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Sparklite Review: Roguelike

Posted By: Ryan - January 10, 2020

A fun, casual roguelike with a few things to be hammered out. Where does Sparklite fit within the roguelike genre? The press release I was given described it as ‘a unique blend of approachable roguelike elements’, and I’d agree with that. This is definitely at the easier end of the roguelike spectrum, thanks to its short length and forgiving design, and that’s no bad thing. Everything is there to see, but nothing

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Our December rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - December 18, 2019

Grand Theft Auto V and Online, Plague Inc: Evolved, Kingdom: New Lands, Stellaris and every game we've had before in this huge festive feast of games! It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games, restocked nearly all our previous choic

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Help us Un-Single your Friends, and Win an Nvidia RTX 2080ti, Xbox 1 and PS4 with $200 worth of games with GamerDating.com!

Posted By: James - December 12, 2019

Help us find dates for your friends! You're still in with a chance for 1 more month to win, one of GamerDating's launch prizes! We're trying to un-single every gamer. And that includes your friends! To say thanks for your help in this, we're still giving everyone a chance to win one of our massive launch prizes for the next month only! We ran the competition on launch and it was so popular we had to extend it just a few m

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Search and Find a Date Hotfix

Posted By: Alex - December 03, 2019

Whoops, we broke the search but we've fixed it! Last month we rolled out an improvement for the backend of our search and Find a Date feature. The update fine tuned our results to produce faster results and helped tackle spammers and bots in sign up. This removed "blank" fields from Signup, to stop people from erroring out and signing up too fast and spamming others. However.... (And we don't give game devs hassle for fixi

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Our November rewards for you!

Posted By: GamerDating Team - November 11, 2019

NiOh: Complete Edition, Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Wildlands, A Fistful of Gun, and Heroes of Might and Magic 3: Complete. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games, restocked some popular choices and added over ten new options availa

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Stranded Sails: Explorers of the Cursed Islands - Survival Game with a twist.

Posted By: Jennifer - November 01, 2019

Stranded Sails a new take on wilderness survival.   Grab your backpack, unfurl your map, and keep your sword at the ready. Here be monsters! Stranded Sails is a bright, fun, relaxed single-player adventure, with an intriguing story and compelling characters that will keep you coming back for more. Gather your crew and set sail for a lively adventure into the unknown!   Stranded Sails Yar Har!   From the first

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Our October rewards for you

Posted By: GamerDating Team - October 01, 2019

ABZU, Book of Demons, Spellforge 3, and A Way Out It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games, restocked some popular choices and added over ten new options available for you! We offer 2 or 4-month subscriptions which allow you to r

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Why do I get bored so Fast?

Posted By: Silja - September 23, 2019

Dopamine and Attachment Anxiety - How to avoid relationship Desert Bus. Ah, that new relationship feeling, its like what you have with a new game, but way better. You have butterflies while chatting to them. You can’t wait until the next time you see them and can’t seem to hide your excitement when you do. They’re constantly on your mind and you never feel like you’ve had your fill. Its like when PubG came out, long bef

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Our August rewards for you

Posted By: GamerDating Team - August 21, 2019

Starbound, Absolver, Bannermen, Battlefield V, GTA V and now Nintendo eShop Gift Cards! It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games, restocked some popular choices and added over ten new options available for you! We offer 2 or 4-mo

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World of Warcraft: Classic - All you need to know

Posted By: GamerDating Team - August 09, 2019

It's coming. It's around the corner. World of Warcraft came out back in 2004, and following that nearly every two years Blizzard rolled out expansions and updates changing World of Warcraft to become an entirely different game, some bits for good, some bits for bad. Regardless of the current state people remembered the fond memory of the original experience. For over a decade, players have been asking Blizzard to release a version o

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Our July rewards for you

Posted By: GamerDating Team - July 24, 2019

Monster Hunter: World, Age of Empires II HD, The Banner Saga 2, Legends of Eisenwald and The Sims 4. It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games and restocked some popular choices like Borderlands 2 GOTY! We offer 2 or 4-month subsc

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They are Billions PS4 Review - Zombies will Zomb.

Posted By: Craig - July 04, 2019

They are Billions bringing steampunk zombie apolcalypse to consoles.   Real Time Strategy games are one of those genres that I’ve always enjoyed but have never really been that good at. I’d panic at the first site of a Zerg rush, I’d play on Easy in Dawn of War, I’d absolutely never play an RTS online against another human and I’m the sort of person who would always use the car cheat in Age of Empires becaus

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GamerDating Patch - Advanced Matchmaking!

Posted By: Alex - June 27, 2019

The Advanced Matchmaking system With our new matchmaking update we have completely refactored the way matches are found, idenfied and presented to you. This was a feature delayed slightly from launch, because we wanted to gauge first: How people were interacting with our old system How many people you want to find every day How often you want to be reminded and emailed about having new matches It turns out, you want to meet as m

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Our June rewards for you

Posted By: GamerDating Team - June 14, 2019

Far Cry 5, Stardew Valley, >observer_, We Happy Few and even more of Borderlands 2 (GOTY edition) because you all love it! It's that time again! Each week we add more new games that are available with your subscription. With every first subscription you get to select a game, gift cards or games to bundle with your premium access. This month we've added even more games, restocked some popular choices like Borderlands 2 that seem

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GamerDating Updates - June Quality of Life

Posted By: GamerDating Team - June 03, 2019

June Update is here! This last month has been a busy one with our launch on May 1st, we had 15,000 people sign up in the first day alone with a steady increase since and your passion has not been unnoticed.   We have taken all your feedback, suggestions and bug reports to review to increase your quality of life when using GamerDating.com. As usual, each week, we take your feedback, bug reports and suggestions and plug them into our

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South of the Circle Preview

Posted By: Ryan - August 15, 2022

Game

A narrative experience about the power of regret.

Emotional, story-driven games like South of the Circle (SotC) are not, for better or worse, everyone’s cup of tea. Originally released in 2021 for Apple Arcade, it was developed by State of Play, published by 11 Bit Studios, and is a compelling story of ambition and love set around the Cold War.

I played SotC on the Nintendo Switch to write this review and was pleasantly surprised by what I found, but not in the way you might expect.

South of the Circle Review

As SotC was originally a mobile game, do not expect high-end graphics. Don’t get me wrong, many mobile devices are capable of high-resolution textures and visuals that other reviewers would no doubt refer to as ‘eye-popping’, but that isn’t what State of Play went for here.

SotC uses an almost comic-book style shader to bring its 3D models to life, as well as motion capture performances and a striking use of colour. While the game may look like a comic book, as the embedded screenshots and videos hopefully demonstrate, the facial animations, simple as they are, are wonderfully translated from the actor’s performance and convey a depth of feeling that many AAA titles strive for, and fail to achieve, with photo-realistic graphics.

 

Mobile game ported to PC looks clean

I’ve seen comic panels that look worse.

 

Where the graphics are relatively minimalistic, relying largely on bright splashes of colour with minimal shading, the soundtrack is phenomenal. A swelling composition that matches the story beat for beat, the music is definitely used here as part of the game and the storytelling, rather than being used as a background element designed to enhance the experience.

As SotC is primarily a narrative-experience, the soundtrack shifts to accommodate each narrative beat, often in time with dramatic camera pans, and ensures that the emotional resonance the developers intended is effortlessly created.

While I won’t find myself humming any of the music on offer here, SotC would not hit as hard as it does without its score.

 

Good music, good visuals, and good vibes

 

The script is powerfully delivered by an all-star cast of actors from television and movies.

Score, of course, isn’t the only form of audio in most video games and the voice acting here is superb. The voice cast contains some of the finest actors around, some of whom have previous voice acting experience, and they consistently knocked it out of the park with their delivery. Games like this are made or broken by two things: the writing and the voice cast.

I’ll discuss the writing below, but the voice cast deserve all the praise I can heap upon them for clearly conveying the frustration, confusion, joy, curiosity, and despair of their character. Not once did I think that a line failed to land correctly and a part of me wishes there were more of the game to experience so I could continue to enjoy their performances.

Narrative story on PC is actually lovely

The UI does nothing to detract from this either. In some narrative games, the UI is cluttered or requires some small amount of brain space to process that detracts from the rest of the game, but not here. Prompts appear in large circles, all the better to tap and hold on a mobile device, and each is coded to fit its purpose.

Empty circles highlight interactive objects, conversation prompts are represented by various symbols denoting the tone of the line being selected, and other interactive options are highlighted with easy-to-understand symbols.

Although most prompts are foreshadowed by a small white dot, I did find myself missing their appearance on several occasions, this may be because I was streaming the game at the time, but it is something to bear in mind. I have further thoughts on the accessibility of the game that will be explored below.

 

I know it’s not a new thing, but it’s a good quality of life feature.

 

But what of the actual gameplay? As with most narrative games, the gameplay itself isn’t too complex. The game takes place over two time periods: 1964 and an extended period leading up the events of 1964.

In both time periods, most of the gameplay is taken up by wonderfully delivered dialogue punctuated by conversation prompts, chances to explore the environments, or walking sections that take Peter, the protagonist, to the next scene.

Now, I should note that, due to the game being developed for mobile devices, Peter doesn’t move terribly smoothly when using the thumbstick of a controller, and that was something that took some getting used to. Beyond that, however, interactive objects are highlighted from a good distance away, and often provide opportunities for environmental storytelling, and the conversation prompts last for a good length of time before disappearing.

That’s it for gameplay really; at its simplest, this is very much a game of walking from interactive cutscene to interactive cutscene with nothing much in between.

 

My description of how the movement feels in this game almost as good as the movement itself.

 

The writing in those cutscenes though? It’s sublime. As I said above, games like SotC are made or broken by their writing and their cast, and the writing does not disappoint. Without wishing to spoil anything, Peter is an academic from Cambridge and the two timelines of the game cover his experiences looking for help in Antarctica, and the events in his life that led him to this point, including meeting Clara, a woman he falls in love with.

Clara is a fellow academic and the two characters allow the writers to explore the ‘old boys club’ feeling of academia from both the outside and the inside, a job which they handled wonderfully. The other members of the cast further build on this, and the global tensions of the Cold War are very much present in both timelines without overshadowing the intensely personal story at the heart of this experience.

PC Port controls are pretty good

As for the story itself, I cannot say much more without spoiling anything, but I will say this: it’s a reflection on how past choices can haunt us, how regret can drive us, and how easy it is to think of the good times when we are struggling.

The ending of the game may not be for everyone, and I will admit that I have mixed feelings on it from a gaming point of view, but it is a perfect capstone of the game’s themes and a culmination of everything that has come before it, as well as a commentary on the nature of choice in real life, not in video games.

As the game progresses, this commentary is hinted at and there are moments of foreshadowing sprinkled throughout that will reward multiple playthroughs.

 

Accessibility in games is important

Credit where it’s due, you can pull this screen up at any time.

 

A handful of accessibility issues tarnish the experience.

There were two main things that marred my enjoyment of SotC: some minor glitches and the accessibility. To get the former out of the way, characters would occasionally clip through terrain, teleport to ensure they were in position for the next line of dialogue, or otherwise behave in an… unnatural manner due their animation not playing correctly.

Speaking of lines of dialogue, I was surprised at how each flowed naturally into the next, given the timing of the conversation prompts, but there were rare instances when I hit the prompt too early and the start of the next line played over the end of the last. The latter problem was my main issue though.

 

Bad ports have been worse

This isn’t the worst offender but provides a good example of the text crossing multiple background colours.

 

I mentioned above that the conversation prompts use symbols to denote the tone of the line you are choosing; there are five of these prompts, each with three similar meanings, and it took me a good hour to really get a handle on what each meant.

Even then, I was occasionally surprised by the dialogue choice I had made as the symbols lack necessary context for the actual body of the response. These prompts are also usually timed and, if the timer expires, a default prompt is chosen. Often this is fine, as there may only be one prompt, but I was unwilling to risk my chosen emotional response not being the default option when multiple options are provided.

Clean art for the game delivers

Even worse, the prompts are not always presented at the same time. Several times, I didn’t realise a second prompt had appeared and had already committed to an option I would not otherwise have chosen (although this is partly my fault because solo prompts always appear above an ‘X’ button prompt on the Switch, Triangle or Y on other gamepads, and I just didn’t notice I wasn’t pressing that button).

Perhaps more annoying, however, was the fact that some prompts were so delayed that the time it took to select them, you must hold your selection for a few seconds, resulted in the first prompt to almost time out by the time my selection had finished. If I hadn’t noticed the second prompt in time, I very well might have been forced to use the other prompt by dint of it timing out first.

 

I hope you can speed read.

 

Interacting with environmental objects was similarly challenging in terms of accessibility. Lines of text are spread across a plain black screen and the object itself, they aren’t fully displayed unless they’re in the exact right place on the screen and the scroll sensitivity when using a thumbstick varied based on which item was being examined.

For the vast majority of people, these are likely to be minor niggles but I struggle with Q.T.E.s in other games because of sensory processing issues and several of the conversation prompts really pushed my ability to react to them, and I know several dyslexics who might struggle to read the background information that is used to enhance the game’s story and characters. A mention should be made, however, of the resizable subtitles being clear to read.

 

Subtitles in games are really important and the options are great

They aren’t perfect, but the fact they’re scalable and have a shadow means almost everyone will be able to find a subtitle setting that suits them.

 

A short game, perfect for a weekend away or a long train journey.

While annoying, I wouldn’t say these issues cropped up enough across the three and a half hours it took me to play SotC to detract from the experience, and even knowing they exist, I am quite likely to replay the game.

The conversation prompts you make throughout the game allow you to tell the game’s story in a wide variety of ways and flavour it to your personal emotional style, but the replayability beyond that is limited to one of two slightly different endings.

This is an accesible game

SotC seems to be retailing for around £10 and I think that’s a fair price. At the end of the day, games like this are more akin to an interactive audiobook and I would happily pay that much for an experience that has as much of an emotional impact on me as SotC did.

I will be replaying it in the future, when I’m over my current case of the feels and that price point means I can replay it because I want to, not because I feel I have to.

 

Fun easter eggs are always welcome

You unlock behind the scenes content as you play, and you don’t even need to find collectibles to do it!

 

Of course, all of this might not matter if you don’t like narrative games with an emphasis on emotional storytelling and exploring what is means to be human, and to make mistakes.

I wholeheartedly recommend South of the Circle to anyone looking for a short game that will make them connect with its characters on an emotional level whilst also exploring the tension of the Cold War and the sexism rife in academia.

Also, if you play it on the Nintendo Switch like I did, you can use the Switch’s touchscreen instead of the Joy-Cons, and that’s pretty neat. The developers even kept the tiny white square in the top left that was the Pause menu button on mobile devices, although it’s never actually explained anywhere what it is.

If you are interested in my live reactions to the game, my full playthrough can be found on YouTube

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