Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by Slartie 2097 days ago
I strongly second this opinion. After playing SOMA (and being seriously frightened by it - you need to play it in the dark at night, with headphones, full immersion style) I was an instant fan of the studio and tried Amnesia. But the entire historic-fantasy-style theme turns me off pretty hard. I'm having a hard time continuing to play it, though I want to give it another chance sometime.

But SOMA? Really, really great game. I'm considering repurchasing it on PS4 and replaying it in my home cinema setup for even more immersion. Though knowing the story beforehand probably takes quite a bit out of the experience.

2 comments

Yes, try to experience SOMA without spoilers. "Figuring it out" is part of the experience.

If you're 5 minutes in and worry that you've figured it out and aren't impressed, don't worry, you haven't seen anything yet.

I found the themes in A Machine for Pigs to be more believable and thus scary than A Dark Descent, but neither hold a candle to SOMA thematically and most people regard A Machine for Pigs to be less good than it's predecessor.
> most people regard A Machine for Pigs to be less good than it's predecessor

I think that's mostly a problem of expectations. TDD focuses on being a horror game while A Machine for Pigs is much closer to a horror-themed walking simulator. If you expect Amnesia II out of A Machine for Pigs then I can see how you would be disappointed but that doesn't make the game worse it just means using the Amnesia name might have been a bad choice since the games are in different subgenres and thus target somewhat different audiences.