When you have a terminal illness that is quite literally eating you alive it makes it harder to do basic tasks that we as humans take for granted (moving for one, breathing is another.) Secondly, the difficulty is there to make you think. I feel as if this was deliberate, not because Heart Machine wanted to frustrate the player, but because it would make sense in the story aspect. I'll be the first to admit that I died 20 some odd times to the first boss in the game. This game is by no means easy, and has a strategy aspect to it. Along the way you'll meet a few other people who are also suffering from the same terminal illness as you. After this you go on the quest to rebuild the world, grabbing all the shards needed to respawn the deities and return them to rule with only your droid to help you. You fall to the bottom of a hole and are knocked unconscious, where you have a dream that the world is being rebuilt, and a dog (that I think is the final deity) guides you back into your consciousness. Eventually enough of the deities die that the world can no longer sustain itself and it starts to fall apart around you. You roam throughout the land and visit every deity you can think of to help cure you of this disease only for the same disease to wither the deity away before you can ask for help. You play as a character who is inflicted with a terminal disease and your looking for a cure. For those of you who want in on what I'm saying, I'll give you my interpretation: Hyper Light Drifter DOES indeed have a story, but it is not told through dialog, it is told through the world design, the confusing cutscenes you watch periodically and the colors of your surroundings. The pixelated SNES-like graphics, the pastel colors contrasting with the dark colors. Show moreįirst I wanna say that this game is indeed gorgeous. Hyper Light Drifter is not a game for kids of any description and players should consider whether the game’s positive ending (heroism, bravery, self-sacrifice for others) is worth the morose setting and imagery of death. But I’d only recommend the game to mature audiences, and the Common Sense rating of 13+ doesn’t properly respect the safety of kids of that age. I don’t believe the level of objectionable content is unacceptable for adults as long as we're critical about what we're playing. Again, I’ve played this game thoroughly, and I enjoyed it a lot. I’m concerned by the attitude of the review, which felt disconnected from my experience with this game specifically and with my experience with game content in general. I do not believe that the review focused sufficiently on the dystopian nature of the game and just how dark it is. By filling that entire subheading with a run-on commentary on how the reviewer felt about the combat pacing, controls and exploration, the review gives a strange impression: Does the “feel” of a game define if it’s “any good”? What happened to the content? However, over two-thirds of this review are dedicated towards technical gameplay and controls (see the section Is It Any Good?). Common Sense Media is a review group that focuses on game content, right? The review ought to focus on whether that content is positive, negative, objectionable or thought-provoking. I noticed spelling errors and confusing grammar/usage throughout. The Negatives: I'm sorry to say that the review on this page is hastily written and looks more like a first draft or a text message than a proper publication. Does thinking about how things will end give us more purpose or sense of anything at all in the here and now?” This is an incredibly positive way to get players and readers to think about how the game connects us with the truth or disconnects us from reality.
The Hyper Light Drifter review ends with a meaningful prompt: “Families can talk about why the end of the world seems to pop up so frequently in fiction. The review ends with discussion questions for kids and parents, which elevates the discussion about this game. Parents are warned with specific ratings for categories of content (such as Positive Messages, Violence, etc). The Positives: The review is structured by subheadings and categories. I believe that the main review has some upsides and some downsides. My response to the Common Sense review is based on my experience. I’ve played about 40 hours of Hyper Light Drifter and beaten the game multiple times.