Operation Backlog Completion 2024
Oct 292021
 

Pony Island is not really a game about playing the endless runner called Pony Island. It’s a game about being trapped in limbo, forced to play the Devil’s badly-made games.

(This is not a spoiler. Pony Island makes no pretense of actually being a cheerful pony game and reveals Lucifer pretty quickly.)

In theory, you’ll be stuck playing Pony Island forever, possibly with the option of giving the Devil your soul. However, it’s a simple matter to exploit the game’s flaws and hack into it in search of a way to escape.

Pony Island is… bizarre. I’d call it a puzzle game first and foremost, since you’ll frequently search for clues of how to proceed and play “hacking” mini-games that involve rearranging tiles to redirect a key down the path you want. There are also some endless runner sections, though, and a few other parts that switch up the gameplay even further.

It’s an entertaining experience. The game is both creepy and funny, and it also has one of the best fourth wall breaking tricks I’ve seen in any game.

Click for Pony Island spoilers
One of the bosses requires you to keep your eyes on him, so you lose if you pause, minimize, open the Steam overlay, etc. At one point in this section, the game mimics you receiving Steam messages from one of your actual Steam friends.

I don’t know how the game chooses which friend to mimic, but for me it picked someone who had actually sent me a real message right ahead of the fight, which made the trick even more effective.

Now, the narrative falls a little short for me. I expected it to do more with its premise, and there are also some inconsistencies due to its different aspects – you’ve got an in-game desktop with multiple programs and games, but it’s also an arcade machine? Okay, maybe nitpicking the logistics of the Devil’s gaming machine isn’t important, but then there’s the fact that much of it is designed so that you, the player, are the main character, yet you can learn more about the main character’s identity and past.

Those are just a couple of minor things that made the game less effective than it could have been, but enough of the things it did were clever enough that I don’t mind.

So if you want a puzzle game that’s creepy, funny, and overall a bizarre experience, check out Pony Island.

Oct 272021
 

I’ve long intended to get into the Corpse Party series, but I was never quite sure where to start due to the number of different versions of the original game.

But this year, I finally got my answer with the release of a new Corpse Party remake. Since it’s pretty much a definitive version as near as I can tell, I picked up a Switch copy and finally played.

It begins with a group of students performing a charm intended to make sure they’re friends forever… but something goes terribly wrong, and they suddenly find themselves in another school, where a tragedy occurred many years earlier and vengeful ghosts stalk the halls.

They’re separated from one another, because the school exists on many different planes of existence. This means that while they’re all in the same location, they aren’t in exactly the same time or place. Corpse Party makes use of this in some interesting ways as you switch between groups of characters.

Although it might resemble an RPG visually in some ways, Corpse Party is essentially an adventure game. Much of your time will be spent figuring out how to get from one place to another, finding keys, etc.

And occasionally, being chased by ghosts and avoiding other dire situations that lead to the game’s numerous bad endings.

It’s fun, if a bit too reliant on checking and re-checking areas to see if something has changed when you have no specific indication that you should return.

It is split into chapters, with each chapter having its own save menu (which confused me a bit at first, especially since the “resume” option only loads temporary saves). Each chapter has its own set of possible endings, a true ending that unlocks the next chapter and several bad endings. Numerous “extra” chapters can be unlocked as well.

The story is dark and disturbing. It doesn’t shy away from gruesome details at all, whether it’s in the main story or in the history that led to this situation.

Now, while I often criticize games that immediately introduce you to a large cast of characters, I didn’t have a problem with that here. Although you meet many characters right away, its chapter-based structure gives you time to get to know them in smaller groups.

I do wish it had a way to skip read text, though, for the times when you get a bad ending and then need to go through a lot of dialogue before you catch up (although the option to make a temporary save helps). On the other hand, the collectible name tags you find are saved even if you get a bad ending, which is very convenient. It’s certainly a story-driven game, and the plot and characters are well worth sticking around for.

Corpse Party is a wonderfully creepy ghost story, and I’m happy this remake gave me the push to finally check this series out. I still have some extra chapters to finish up, but then I look forward to moving on to the sequels in the future!

Oct 252021
 

I’ve been meaning to try Higurashi When They Cry for a long time, ever since I picked up the first five chapters in a visual novel bundle ages ago.

It’s intimidating to get into since it’s so long in its entirety, but I decided the time had come to play at least the first chapter.

Higurashi When They Cry Hou – Ch.1 Onikakushi, which is currently free, starts with a boy who has recently moved to a small, rural town and is enjoying life there with his new friends.

In addition to this entry being the first chapter of the larger story, it is divided into chapters itself, which made it easy for me to keep saying I’d just read one more chapter.

The first part of the story is lighthearted and pleasant, and it lasts much longer than you might expect for a horror story. This is slow-burn horror for sure. There are a few hints that something darker might lurk beneath the surface, but then after a certain point in the story, everything changes.

As creepy things start to happen, it gets more and more unsettling, with a bit of that sense of paranoia I so enjoyed in Chaos;Head (although not to the same extreme).

The end left me questioning what really happened, and I can’t wait to see what will happen in the later chapters. Is something supernatural at work or not? What is this leading up to?

I understand the first few chapters stand somewhat on their own, although they build on one another. I hadn’t intended to play all of the chapters back-to-back, but with how intrigued the end of Higurashi When They Cry Chapter 1 left me, I might not wait too long after all.