For the RPG side, there are standard XP gains and leveling that open up higher stats in a chosen category. The core gameplay is that of an action-RPG in the same vein as something like The Witcher. With the exception of species and fur patterns and colors, everything else can be evened out as you journey through the game, so you can have a sharpshooter with faster reloading skills who has the chance to shoot electricity while holding two blades. Finally, there's the class system that dictates which specialties you'll have from the start, whether it's the ability to dual-wield melee weapons or an electric spark ball. From here, you select resistance specialties before moving on to fur type and color. From here, you move a cursor around a circle to change some stats and morph various body parts. When you begin, you're met with a character creation system that starts with selecting between six different species, each with a distinct look and starting statistics. It's a novel approach, but those who grow tired of it can easily adjust the sliders so he can chirp less and/or do more instant translations. Instead of the speech being subtitled, your robot grasshopper companion (voiced by David Shaw-Parker) translates it for you. Every creature always talks to you in their own tongue, which sounds like an amalgamation of words from various familiar languages. One of the more charming aspects to this is that you never hear any of the animals speak to you in English. At the same time, everyone - from allies in a chosen tribe to the gigantic Worldeaters - sport enough fur to make them inviting enough to hug if they existed in real life. The actual appearance skirts the line between cute and realistic, with most of them having visible sharp teeth and the inability to create facial expressions that are immediately recognizable to the human eye. All of the creatures you meet tend to be animals that seem unique but are mostly recognizable. Then there's the most obvious of the changes: the presence of animals instead of humans. At the very least, it feels fresh considering how the nuclear arms race is often used as the catalyst for these sorts of titles. Biomutant can get heavy with this, sometimes resulting in short conversations that amplify why greed was the real cause, but it never gets to the point where the title becomes preachy. Instead of taking on the likes of Fallout or Wasteland with a nuclear Armageddon, the game ties it to pollution caused by a megacorporation. You might even use the built-in photo mode to take snapshots.Īnother major change is the actual cause of the apocalypse. The forests provide gorgeous scenery, especially when seen in conjunction with the wind, a sunset, or a smattering of rain. Tall grasses and flowers blanket the land and hills, while trees of all types create lush forests that don't just act as the artificial walls of the world. The land still features some unnatural sections that are plagued by radiation or chemical fumes, but most of the world is filled with vegetation. When compared to other postapocalyptic games, the buildings don't seem to be comprised of scraps. Ruins still exist, some in much sturdier shape than others, but there are a significant number of villages and forts that are inspired by older Asian architecture. At the same time, the predator is still out there, and the six major tribes that are instrumental to saving the world are at war with one another.įor those who enjoy stores with postapocalyptic settings, Biomutant will be up their alley, but those who usually shy away from this setting will find it appealing due to the changes from the norm. You encounter someone from your youth, who asks you to save the Tree of Life from Worldeaters, who are gnawing at the roots of the life-giving plant. Players take on the role of one of a mutated and evolved creature orphaned as a child due to a predator, you were forced to become a powerful fighter to survive. The game is set far into the future in a world where animals have mutated, becoming both bipedal and civilized, creating villages and forming tribes on top of the remnants of the old world. Existing owners of the PS4 and Xbox One versions are receiving this as a free upgrade. Even though there are several factors about why next-generation consoles haven't proliferated as much as expected and there is backward compatibility, the team at Experiment 101 has developed a specific version of Biomutant for PS5 and Xbox Series X. It has received patches, but there has been no DLC, making it a rare complete game at launch. The critical reception was mixed, but we enjoyed it very much on the PC. In 2021, Biomutant was released on the PC, PS4 and Xbox One.
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