Aloft, a ‘Co-op Floating Island Survival Sandbox Game,’ Announced for PC

Aloft, a “co-op floating island survival sandbox game,” has been announced for PC. A demo is now available on Steam.

The publisher, Astrolabe Interactive, describes Aloft as such: “In Aloft, players must survive on islands floating around an eternal hurricane sitting at the center of their world. After building a base and calling one of these islands home, would-be adventurers can outfit their enclave with sails to travel the winds so that they may discover new territories and collect resources, technologies, and equipment upgrades. On their journey, travelers must cleanse nature of dangerous fungi that contaminate flora and corrupt wildlife in order to free and heal the ecosystem from harm. As they make progress on their expedition through the sky, players will uncover the secrets of a lost civilization and find their origins by soaring to the highest altitudes of this mysterious new realm.” Take a look at the official announcement trailer above, and screenshots from the latest build below.

Aloft also includes an island editor as well as cooperative play for up to eight players. Based on the trailer, it’s got a promising amount of unique hooks to hopefully balance out its familiar elements. Check out the demo and/or wishlist it on Steam if you’re interested.

Ryan McCaffrey is IGN’s executive editor of previews and host of both IGN’s weekly Xbox show, Podcast Unlocked, as well as our monthly(-ish) interview show, IGN Unfiltered. He’s a North Jersey guy, so it’s “Taylor ham,” not “pork roll.” Debate it with him on Twitter at @DMC_Ryan.

Unleash your inner Bob Ross with Morrowind’s Joy Of Painting mod

The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind arrived on PC, one mod has finally given us the option to ignore all the questing and just enjoy capturing the game’s fantastical scenery on canvas. With the Joy Of Painting mod, you can set up your field easel anywhere in Morrowind, daub some brush strokes on a canvas, and even flog the painting to earn a bit of cash.

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Ken Block’s Lasting Racing Legacy

If your first real exposure to Ken Block was his collaboration with Codemasters for Colin McRae Dirt 2, released on PC and seventh-generation consoles way back in 2009, you may not have known what to make of him at the time. Pitched as the new face of the franchise in the early promotional materials, Block cut a drastically different figure on screen to the late Colin McRae. McRae had a famous reputation as a madman behind the wheel, but outside of a rally car the Scot always appeared calm, natural, and low-key. Perched behind a set of sunglasses indoors and flanked by Monster Energy models, Block certainly seemed like a contrasting character; a hot dog hand grenade set to blow up Codemasters’ conventions. Scotland’s South Lanarkshire was making way for the Spring Break swagger of Long Beach, California, and Block was clearly being positioned as a core part of Dirt 2’s pivot to a considerably more US-centric, X Games-inspired take on rally racing.

Of course, the sideways shift from a strict focus on traditional rallying was a natural move at the time. Rallying was building steam in the US, and even Colin McRae himself had then-recently been established as a genuine X Games star following his famous duel with extreme sports berserker Travis Pastrana in 2006. McRae and Pastrana had dominated the debut of Rally Car Racing at X Games 12, and McRae looked set to pinch the gold in the final event. That is, until spectacularly rolling his Impreza on the final jump in front of a packed stadium, landing upright in a cloud of dirt, and furiously flooring it over the finish line and securing the second-place silver medal. That Codemasters took notice of his exploits here is a given.

Scotland’s South Lanarkshire was making way for the Spring Break swagger of Long Beach, California.

Still, while there’s no doubt McRae’s tragic passing in 2007 left a hole in rallying, as well as in the video games that celebrate it, you’d have probably been forgiven for wondering whether Ken Block was the right man to fill it.

However, there was much more to Ken Block than any of that early manufactured marketing bluster might have ever suggested.

Tragically, Block passed away at just 55 in a snowmobile accident earlier this month. The news sent shockwaves through the worlds of rally, rallycross, extreme sports, and even the video game industry. If you’re unfamiliar with him, his story is a fascinating one.

Ken Block’s motorsport career didn’t actually begin until 2005, during the inaugural season of the Rally America National Championship. Prior to this, throughout the ’90s, Block had been a successful entrepreneur behind the scenes in board sports – from the establishment of Blunt Snowboard Magazine to the co-founding of DC Shoes alongside Damon Way (the brother of pro skater Danny Way). During the rapid growth of DC Shoes Block had busied himself boosting up extreme sports superstars from the worlds of skating, snowboarding, surfing, BMX, and motocross. Many of these athletes remain household names thanks to such promotion. However, after Quiksilver acquired DC Shoes in 2004, Block pulled off a deeply impressive twist: he became a global sports superstar himself.

At 37 – an age where most racing drivers are over two decades into their careers and rapidly approaching retirement – Block was named Rally America’s Rookie of the Year.

Block’s childhood dream had been to become a professional skateboarder or snowboarder, but he also loved rallying. At 37 – an age where most racing drivers are over two decades into their careers and rapidly approaching retirement – Block was named Rally America’s Rookie of the Year. He would go on to be a 16-time event winner in the series, behind only regular collaborator Travis Pastrana (19), and David Higgins (26), who replaced Pastrana at Subaru Rally Team USA in 2011.

Block would later make history as the first American to compete and earn points in the World Rally Championship, and the WRC recently announced it would be retiring the number 43 – the digits displayed on his cars throughout his career – as a mark of respect. He also had two-dozen starts in the World Rallycross Championship, picking up a pair of third-place podium finishes. On the world stage Block admittedly wasn’t the fastest in the field, but his exploits in rally would ultimately be just one part of what would make him an international auto icon.

Block’s Gymkhana videos are the defining viral automotive video content, with over a billion views and counting across all 10 short films in the series. Block and his team turned having fun in cars into an artfully mixed package of precision driving, insane jumps, and wild drifting – shot in a dynamic way that no one else seemed capable of matching. He’d basically made a skate video with cars, where the focus was exclusively on expression rather than competition. Few people were going to tune in to see Ken Block win Missouri’s Rally in the 100 Acre Wood, but tens of millions would be instantly hooked on watching him do donuts around a man on a Segway scooter.

The first, DC Shoes: Ken Block Gymkhana Practice, arrived in September 2008 and featured Ken Block shredding a decommissioned airbase in a rally-bred Subaru Impreza WRX STi. While modest by his later standards, the original Gymkhana video exploded on the internet. Gymkhana 2 arrived less than a year later, quickly followed by Block’s first appearance on Top Gear, where then-host James May referred to him as a “gamestation character who has emerged into the real world.” The comment was probably more prescient than May realised at the time.

More followed, filmed in various locations including Universal Studios, France, Dubai, and the streets of San Francisco (which has been watched over 115 million times). Sydney, Australia famously missed out on having its very own Gymkhana video in time for the arrival of Forza Horizon 3; Block and his crew were forced to abandon filming down under following the involvement of NSW Police and the opportunity was missed. Now it’s lost forever.

Block expanded on the Gymkhana concept with Climbkhana – a spin-off that saw him tackle Pikes Peak and resulted in one of the most iconic motorsports images captured this century. The sight of Block’s twin-turbo, 1,400-horsepower, methanol-powered Mustang – the Hoonicorn – perilously close to the edge of the mountain, spraying gravel into an unpictured abyss, is unforgettable. He riffed on it again in October last year with Electrikhana, fully embracing the future of fast driving and shredding the Vegas strip in an all-electric, all-wheel-drive Audi S1 nicknamed the Hoonitron.

The sight of Block’s twin-turbo, 1,400-horsepower, methanol-powered Mustang – the Hoonicorn – perilously close to the edge of the mountain, spraying gravel into an unpictured abyss, is unforgettable.

Codemasters integrated Block’s Gymkhana into 2011’s Dirt 3, but while Block would later part ways with Codemasters after its follow-up Dirt Showdown, his influence and imprint on video games would continue. Block would go on to appear in Ghost Games’ 2015 Need for Speed reboot as himself, featuring on the cover and briefly within cutscenes. Despite the overt dorkiness of Need for Speed 2015’s first-person fist-bumping attitude, Block was an otherwise perfect fit amongst its cast of auto icons – which included Lamborghini tuner Shinichi Morohoshi and Porsche builder Magnus Walker. For all its faults, Need for Speed 2015 was deeply reverential to car culture and throughout the last decade Ken Block has helped define car culture more than most.

Block’s famous fleet of highly recognisable cars – including the Hoonicorn, the Hoonitruck, and many more – would later go on to make many appearances in the Forza Motorsport and Forza Horizon series. If you’ve spent any meaningful time with Forza Motorsport 7, or Forza Horizon 3, 4, and 5, there’s a very strong chance you’ve been behind the wheels of his rides, which are amongst the fastest in the games. In fact, Block and Gymkhana creative director Brian Scotto even put together a special video project with their Hoonigan Industries crew back in 2020 in response to the popularity of the Hoonicorn in Forza, where Block drag raced an eclectic variety of high performance vehicles on a real-life airstrip in a series appropriately dubbed “Hoonicorn vs. the World.” A second series arrived in 2021 – produced in partnership with mobile racing game CSR2 – and continued the concept, only with one twist: Ken Block had stepped out of the driver’s seat for his daughter Lia, who followed her father into motorsport and was just 14 at the time of filming.

This was the Ken Block I most admired and, from the tributes that flowed in from his friends, peers, and other extreme sports stars following his death, this was the real Ken Block. While I greatly respected his creativity and car control in the driver’s seat, Block as a slightly nervous dad who seemed happier being caught hovering just off camera than on it was more relatable. His enthusiasm for seeing Lia succeed against experienced race drivers was simply infectious.

While his most important legacy will be his family, Ken Block also leaves behind a permanent thumbprint on automotive culture, from his impact on rallying in the US to his success in bringing his unmistakable brand of action driving to mainstream social media. His string of savvy video game collaborations, all of which have helped make his vehicles some of the most recognisable race cars of the modern era, will also remain as time capsules for his fans to experience them as Block intended. He will be greatly missed.

Vale Ken Block. #43 forever.

Luke is Games Editor at IGN’s Sydney office. You can chat to him on Twitter @MrLukeReilly.

The Last Starship is boldly going into early access later this spring

The Last Starship is heading out of alpha and into early access on Steam this spring, RPS can exclusively reveal, and there will be a public demo going live later this week on January 26th. If you’ve ever fancied yourself as the Captain Kirk or Commander Adama type, then you’ll have a chance to construct and run your own spacecraft, and choose what missions you take on in this spaceship management game. Watch the latest trailer for The Last Starship below to get an idea of what spacey shenanigans await.

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Dead Space Remake Is Too Scary for Its Own Technical Director

Dead Space remake’s technical director has admitted that he struggles to play the game outside of daylight hours because he finds it too scary.

As reported by GamesRadar, technical director David Robillard told PLAY magazine in a recent interview that when he plays Dead Space remake at night, he can’t use headphones because the game is extremely immersive and becomes too terrifying of an experience.

“When I’m playing it at night, I can’t play it with headphones,” he confessed. “It’s just too f***ing scary. Just the amount of realism and, again, atmosphere. Not just visually, right? In the way we handle sound, ambience, effects, having systems that will try to spook you.”

Dead Space has been rebuilt from the ground up in EA’s Frostbite engine, with Assassin’s Creed Valhalla game director Eric Baptizat at the helm alongside creative director Roman Campos-Oriola, who promised to deliver “new assets, new character models, [and] new environments.”

The game’s developers consulted diehard fans to help keep them on track with their goal of staying faithful to the vision of the original game while also crafting new gameplay content and improvements, though Robillard admits they have elevated things to a whole new level.

“These things, you know, could have been done [on PS4], but not to the level we’re doing them today,” he explained in the interview. “And they really add a lot to this sort of genre and make the whole kind of experience come together even more.

“We needed to find a way to fill those gaps, so that the player doesn’t feel like ‘Oh, I’ve been here, it’s fine, I’m safe’. No, you’re never safe. Like, you will get jumped,” Robillard added before issuing one final warning: “Somebody wants your lunch money, and they’re not friendly.”

Dead Space remake will be released on PS5, Xbox Series X|S and PC on January 27, and is available to preorder in several editions. Like its predecessor, it finds engineer Isaac Clarke among the last survivors of a deep space catastrophe on the mining ship USG Ishimura.

We recently wrapped up a month of Dead Space IGN First content including revealing the first 18 minutes of gameplay, showing off graphics comparisons with the original, and a deep dive into how the story has been rewritten and improved alongside a hands-on preview.

Adele Ankers-Range is a freelance entertainment writer for IGN. Follow her on Twitter.

Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 gets Hardcore mode in next month’s Season 02 update

Modern Warfare 2’s multiplayer sees a return for the fast-paced Hardcore mode from previous Call Of Duty games when Season 02 arrives on February 15th. Over the weekend, devs Infinity Ward tweeted about Hardcore mode’s imminent comeback in the forthcoming update. Hardcore mode chucks out the game’s HUD, turns on friendly fire, and reduces health to make matches quicker and a little more unpredictable. There’ll also be some changes to Warzone 2’s DMZ, such as new missions and difficulty tuning.

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Poll: What Review Score Would You Give Fire Emblem Engage?

Engaged or disengaged?

We’re sure a lot of you lovely readers have been engaging with a certain strategy RPG over the weekend. Yep, we’re talking about Fire Emblem Engage, which launched on Switch last Friday.

Okay, so this is a huge 40-50 hour game and we’re not expecting you all to have blasted through the entire thing over the past few days, but we do really want to know what you think about Alear’s adventure so far, which sees multiple Fire Emblem protagonists of past return in summonable ‘Emblem’ forms.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

How to Watch the Xbox & Bethesda Developer_Direct on Wednesday

Do you want to be the first to learn about some of the biggest titles coming soon to Xbox, PC and Xbox Game Pass? This Wednesday, the Developer_Direct will have all the details (and gameplay) you’ll need.

Presented together by Xbox and Bethesda, the Developer_Direct will share new, extended gameplay for Redfall, Forza Motorsport, Minecraft Legends and The Elder Scrolls Online and provide all the latest news straight from the teams at Arkane Austin, Turn 10 Studios, Mojang Studios and ZeniMax Online Studios. Immediately following the Developer_Direct will be a full, standalone ESO Global Reveal Event, hosted by ZeniMax Online Studios.

When is the event? Wednesday, January 25, at 12 pm Pacific Time/3 pm Eastern Time/8 pm British Time

How do I watch? The Developer_Direct will be streamed live on the official Xbox and Bethesda channels, below:

The show will also be streamed out simultaneously on regional Xbox and Bethesda channels around the globe, as well as on Steam and China’s Bilibili.

Important note: the show will be streamed in 1080p at 60fps. For a more representative look at the visuals contained in the showcase, we recommend watching the 4K / 60fps rebroadcast of the showcase on the Xbox YouTube channel, which will be available after the conclusion of the premiere.

Is the event available in languages other than English?  We will be providing subtitle support and/or audio dubbed translations in the following languages: Arabic, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Norwegian, Persian (Farsi), Polish, Portuguese, Portuguese (Brazilian), Russian, Slovak, Spanish (Castilian), Spanish (Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukranian, and Vietnamese. We expect to have all languages available with the show’s live broadcast but it is possible that select languages may need to be added in the days following the broadcast if they have not finished translating.

The easiest way to find your preferred language is to check out your country’s Xbox page on Facebook or by viewing on the official Xbox YouTube channel and clicking the gear icon in the lower right corner.

Is the show going to be Accessible to those with low/no hearing or low/no vision? There will be a version of the show with Audio Descriptions (AD) in English on the Xbox YouTube channel, and American Sign Language (ASL) on Xbox’s YouTube channel and the new /XboxASL Twitch channel.

I’m not going to be able to watch, where can I find out what was announced? As announcements roll out during the broadcast, the Xbox Wire team will be publishing detailed blog posts containing key announcements right here on Xbox Wire (including localized versions in Brazilian Portuguese, French, German, LATAM Spanish, and Japanese).

Notes for co-streamers and creators: We at Xbox greatly appreciate any co-stream efforts and aim to ensure you have a smooth experience if you choose to do so.

However, due to forces beyond our control, we cannot guarantee that glitches or disruptions by bots and other automated software won’t interfere with your co-stream.

Video on Demand (VOD): For those planning to create full post-show breakdowns in the form of VOD coverage, we recommend you do not use any audio containing copyrighted music to avoid any action by automated bots, and to also consult the terms of service for your service provider.

Will there be an Extended Stream? The Elder Scrolls Online team will continue the livestream with a standalone Global Reveal Event immediately after the Developer_Direct. A standalone show for Bethesda Game Studios’ Starfield is also in the works – we’ll have more to share soon.

We’ll see you at the Developer_Direct on January 25!

Related:
Welcome to the Hunt! An Intro to Monster Hunter Rise on Xbox and PC
A New Year Rings in New EA Play Rewards!
Persona 3 Portable and Persona 4 Golden Are Out Now Xbox and Windows PC

Fortnite Presents The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams, starting Jan 27

Sony Music artist The Kid Laroi, Australian rapper, singer, and songwriter has become a global force to be reckoned with since his ascent in 2019. His bangers and dramatic beats are coming to Fortnite starting January 27 at 3PM PT — in The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams. This immersive sonic experience will portray Laroi’s journey from humble beginnings to headlining sold-out performances, as well as becoming a worldwide superstar.

New music from Laroi will be featured in The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams, including his upcoming song “Love Again” being released on Friday, January 27. “Love Again” isn’t the only new song featured in the experience, as three unreleased songs will also play in both this experience and the Afterparty experience.

Dress harmoniously for The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams with The Kid Laroi and The Rogue Laroi Outfits, available before the experience goes live. Both Outfits will be available in the Fortnite Item Shop beginning January 26.

Additionally, on January 24, players can compete in The Kid Laroi Cup for an opportunity to unlock these Outfits early, plus a special Banner Icon and Emoticon

Take Part in The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams

The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams will have you venturing in the cybercity “Laroitown,” where you’ll ultimately attend a jam-packed Laroi concert featuring fan-favorite music and new music. After the performance, join Laroi in the Afterparty experience. Here, you can listen to the Wild Dreams mix on loop while getting a look inside the tour life, and beyond, of Laroi.

Complete The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams Quests (during both experiences!) to earn XP and special Laroi items, such as the Love Again and Thousand Miles Lobby Tracks, Laroi & The Rogue Loading Screen, and the Laroi Was Here and Laroi’s Tag Sprays. These Quests will be live from January 27 at 3 PM PT to 3PM PT on February 3, 2023.

Fortnite The Kid Laroi's Wild Dreams QuestsFortnite Laroi & The Rogue Loading Screen

To get to the experience, select The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams tile on the Discover screen, or input the island code 2601-0606-9081. Either option will take you to the island where the experience takes place, made by creators Alliance Studios, Team Atomic, and TheBoyDilly, and features a video directed by Adrien Wagner and produced by La Pac.

Also in an island made by Alliance Studios, Team Atomic, and TheBoyDilly, the Afterparty experience will be available from January 27 at 3 PM PT to April 27 at 3PM PT. Join by selecting the The Kid Laroi’s Wild Dreams Afterparty tile on the Discover screen or by inputting the island code 4294-0410-6136.

Choose Your Inner Laroi

Want to dress for the occasion? Starting January 26 at 4 PM PT, the Kid Laroi and The Rogue Laroi Outfits (plus more items) will be available in the Fortnite Item Shop.

The Kid Laroi Outfit and Back Bling

Fortnite The Kid Laroi Outfit

From dreamer to hitmaker.

Work your way to the top with The Kid Laroi Outfit. This Outfit has the Electrified Style in addition to its default Style. Included with the Outfit is the Get My Bag Back Bling, which has the blue default Style and pink Left Alone Style.

The Rogue Laroi Outfit, Back Bling/Pickaxe, and Wrap

Fortnite The Rogue Kid Laroi Outfit

From hitmaker to hunter.

Eliminate opponents on the battlefield with The Rogue Laroi Outfit, which has the Electrified Style in addition to its default Style. This Outfit comes with the Tragic Blade Back Bling. Unsheathe the Tragic BLADE as a Pickaxe! Also coming to the shop, the Laroi Free Style Wrap matches the Outfit too.

Emotes and Lobby Track

Fortnite The Kid Laroi Emotes and Lobby Track

Keep the party going even after the Afterparty with these Item Shop items:

  • Stay Afloat Emote – Just relax and let it carry you away… 
  • Heart of a King Emote – Take a Love(seat) Again.
  • Stay Lobby Track – Press play and feel the way I feel.

The Stay Afloat Emote, Heart of a King Emote, and Stay Lobby Track can be purchased individually or via the Laroi’s Party Starter Bundle, which additionally includes the Wild Dreams Loading Screen:

Fortnite Wild Dreams Loading Screen

Keep your head in the clouds.

Battle to the Top in The Kid Laroi Cup

Be as fearless as Laroi in The Kid Laroi Cup. Compete in this Duos Zero Build tournament on January 24 for the opportunity to be among the top point-earning players in your region, unlocking The Kid Laroi Outfit (+ Get My Bag Back Bling) and The Rogue Laroi Outfit (+ Tragic Blade Back Bling/Pickaxe) early. Also, earn at least eight points to unlock a Laroi Banner Icon and the Laroi’s Smile Emoticon.

Fortnite The Kid Laroi Cup

Competitors can play up to ten matches within their region’s approximately three-hour time window, and the specific event timing for each region can be found in the Compete tab in-game. 

Fortnite The Kid Laroi Cup Rewards

See you when the party starts in Fortnite on January 27.

Forspoken Review

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: a down-on-their-luck orphan has their life turned upside-down when they get whisked away to a fantastical new world where they suddenly have magical powers, reluctantly rising to become the hero its people need to stop an evil threat. If that sounds like every fantasy book you’ve ever forgotten you read, it’s probably because Forspoken is a remarkably generic RPG – from its bland story to its lifeless open world. Thankfully its energetic combat and flashy parkour movement system do keep the relatively slim campaign decently entertaining throughout, but running through its boilerplate checklist of repetitive side tasks doesn’t hold much appeal beyond mindless trophy hunting after that.

The newest action-RPG from Square Enix puts you in the brooding shoes of Frey Holland, a well-acted but largely unlikable New Yorker who gets pulled through a portal to the fantasy realm of Athia after accidentally becoming bonded to an equally unlikable talking armband she calls Cuff. The four realms of Athia have been afflicted with a corruption that has forced its populace into the last remaining city of Cipal, and it falls on Frey and her newly imbued powers to help its citizens and face four powerful rulers called Tantas – not that she’s very interested in doing so.

Forspoken’s world and story are about as bland as they come, equal parts predictable and forgettable. That’s not so offensive on its own, but the real crime is how poorly the writing establishes any of its characters and the relationships between them – it’s like it constantly assumed I must already be invested in these people in a way it never actually made me. The most egregious example of this is the chemistry between Frey and Cuff, which frames most of the campaign as a sort of buddy cop movie but spends almost no time showing these two unlikely partners grow closer after their introduction.

Actual bonding apparently happens off-screen, and this story – which is mostly told through exposition dumps between large stretches of open-world exploration – felt fairly rushed across the 15 hours it took me to beat the campaign as a result. That means the snippy banter between Cuff and Frey come off as obnoxious rather than endearing. Frey is surprisingly vocal about her disdain for most of the tasks Forspoken asks you to complete, and Cuff constantly belittles her for no good reason in a manner that I think is supposed to come off as friendly ribbing but instead feels like awkwardly watching a couple argue at a dinner party. This dynamic never really changes, even as Frey slowly goes through the motions of her predictable hero’s journey, and it is always exhausting.

Combat and parkour can be fun even if they never get too deep.

Forspoken is essentially split into two parts: talking to townsfolk and doing mundane side quests like feeding sheep or chasing cats in Cipal, and making your way to some specific point of interest on its absurdly large map to further the story. I don’t think the Cipal sections would have bothered me if conversations and cutscenes didn’t have such a stilted, strangely low-budget feel to them. The performances throughout can actually be quite good, even when the writing leans heavily into telling rather than showing – but none of it is ever very fun to listen to thanks to long, awkward pauses between lines and occasional crowd noise or background music that’s so loud it drowns out everything being said.

Between visits to Cipal, you’re generally given a target on your map and free rein to get as distracted as you’d like along the way. That involves sprinting across Athia’s rocky terrain using Frey’s magic parkour skills, flipping over obstacles and eventually using a grappling whip to swing long distances, and then beating the snot out of enemies at various points of interest for new equipment and other rewards. This is what you’ll be doing for the vast majority of your time with Forspoken, and it can be a lot of fun even if those systems never get too deep.

Frey gains four styles of elemental magic over the course of the campaign, each essentially a different weapon you can quickly swap between with its own set of alternate fire modes and unlockable support skills – all of which can then be modestly upgraded as you play. Her starting magic is basically an earth-based gun that can be fired rapidly or charged for an area-of-effect burst, with skills that root enemies to the ground, up your defense temporarily, and more. You don’t even have a melee attack until you unlock the fire-based sword option about a third of the way through the campaign, which was a little annoyingly restrictive at first.

But once you do open up more of Frey’s capabilities, Forspoken’s particle effect-filled combat becomes quite amusing. Enemy variety isn’t exactly impressive (special larger baddies in particular can be really cool the first time you fight them, but less so by the third), but elemental resistances and unique quirks pushed me to swap weapons and strategies frequently mid-fight in a way I really enjoyed. For example, I loved that shielded enemies could be dealt with either by getting behind them or by charging an AOE shot and then firing it at the ground nearby to knock them off their guard. One-on-one fights can devolve into locking onto your target and holding down the trigger while you strafe out of harm’s way with Forspoken’s extremely generous dodge system, but the group encounters often did a good job of keeping me on my toes.

Very little of Athia is worth stopping to admire.

Similarly, the parkour system is a mix of straightforward and flashy, sending you nimbly soaring across the environment by simply holding down the Circle button and pointing yourself in a given direction. Just like your attacks, this becomes a lot more fun once you unlock some cooler skills, like options that boost your speed with well-timed button presses. That said, it is also far more mindless than combat, requiring very little nuance even as additional techniques become available to you and rarely ever testing your mastery of those moves with difficult platforming challenges. Even still, it can be quite a satisfying way to fancifully flow from task to task without much thought.

That’s a good thing, too, because there is a considerable amount of ground to cover in Athia, and very little of it is worth stopping to admire. This world is huge, and the campaign doesn’t even send you near half of it. The map is littered with optional side objective markers, but there isn’t much reason to go too far off the beaten path to complete them when the same small handful of tasks are repeated ad nauseam no matter where they are placed. They almost all boil down to either fighting some random dudes to earn a reward or just being handed one outright, and the payoffs don’t feel particularly necessary unless you decide to up the difficulty to Hard. Plenty of open-world games follow a similar structure, but Forspoken does it with such a barebones transparency that Athia comes off less like a world for you to explore and more like a repetitive checklist asking to be crossed off.

It doesn’t help that Athia lacks much in the way of interesting visual landmarks, with different areas gated off by blatantly artificial mountain ranges and filled with piles of samey rocks and ruins to hop over. Each of the four regions offer a little twist to their layout, be that wide open fields or extra hills, but they’d still all blend together if it weren’t for the distinct color filter slapped onto each one. After the credits rolled I ran around this map for another dozen or so hours, hoping to find some exciting secrets in the hard-to-reach corners I hadn’t visited – but with the exception of an isolated trader selling a few neat items (literally the only NPC I met outside of Cipal), all I saw was the same side tasks on the same bland landscapes, over and over and over again. I’m sure there will be diehard completionists out there excited for a chance to put on a podcast and spend dozens of hours clearing every single map marker and opening every single chest (the kind of game I actually wrote about back in 2019), but I was given very little motivation to do so here.

The upside of that lack of urgency is that Forspoken’s progression systems mercifully don’t devolve into a grind on its Normal difficulty either, never forcing you to do anything you don’t want to. There are only three types of equipable items: cloaks, necklaces, and the charmingly creative nail polish designs. The first two are basically identical, increasing your health, defense, and magic while also offering special perks like increasing critical hit chance, while nails provide more unique boons like upping a specific type of magic. A light crafting system lets you upgrade your cloaks and necklaces by using resources you collect out in the field, increasing their stats and letting you swap in the perks of any gear you’ve found so far. That lends a lot of welcome flexibility to how you choose to play (and your fashion choices), but it’s also not the most exciting system since the majority of improvements are simple numerical boosts that are hard to see the effect of in the heat of battle.