Need to know
What is it? A narrative FPS with light RPG elements set in a Russian Westworld
Expect to pay: $59.99 (Steam)
Developer: Mundfish
Publisher: Focus Entertainment, 4Divinity
Reviewed on: Windows 10, GeForce GTX 1070, 16GB RAM, i7-7700HQ
Multiplayer: No
Link: https://mundfish.com/
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Four or five hours into Atomic Heart, you’ll walk through a door and the game will swing into one of many seamless first-person cutscenes. A man points a gun at you, babbles something about blowing a giant plant to kingdom come, and your protagonist gruffly swears, complains, and sets about fetching the thing to blow up the thing. You’ll soon return, shove a bunch of explosive into the plant, see it ignited by a cigarette while your character calls the plant a “fuckbag”, and watch the scientist die gruesomely in the aftermath because his role in the game is over.
I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. In fact a lot of Atomic Heart will leave you grasping for purchase, as it freewheelingly veers from enormous setpieces to endless fetch quests, as critiques of Russian exceptionalism rub up against a protagonist who calls robots “fat turds” and a script that seems to have been written with the help of a swearing thesaurus. You’ll gaze into the eerie, porcelain face of an android and marvel at how well the game’s aesthetic captures its unsettling science fiction of humanoid robots, and then be grossed-out by a vending machine begging you to “squirt your polymer in me”.
This is one of the oddest big-budget games I’ve played in a long time, filled with as many good ideas as bad ones, almost like it’s been made without a filter. Everything went in. The game’s influences are numerous—Westworld, Fallout, Arkane’s Prey—but the one that looms above them all is BioShock.
Atomic Hearts’ narrative-focused opening is like a communist version of Columbia and the grandeur of its sprawling research institute, a utopia-gone-wrong showcasing the best of retro-futurist Soviet robotics, makes for one breathtaking vista after another. But the influence runs far deeper than aesthetic. Combat is built around a plasmid equivalent, several of which are directly lifted from BioShock, while the narrative style of first-person talking heads, radio logs, and companions is straight from the Irrational playbook. At times Atomic Heart almost pulls it off.
The one-two punch
I don’t mind that Atomic Heart copies Bioshock’s electric bolt plasmid. But it annoys me to no end that it feels so underpowered.
Atomic Heart benefits from the tried-and-tested nature of these techniques, but it suffers from the fact it’s so indebted to a very famous, very striking FPS from 16 years ago.
BioShock starts you off with a wrench and an electric shock attack called electro bolt, and Atomic Heart does more or less the same but with an axe. The difference is that Atomic Heart’s electric shock feels… well, like it’s just giving things a tickle. The combat has fairly standard basics (a melee weapon, a pistol, a shotgun, a grenade launcher) but is made nuanced by some great individual twists, like the zappy pistol you can upgrade into a death-dealing chargeable shock beam. You can customise your weapons into various damage types (electrical damage for robots, bleed damage for organic foes) and secondary effects like knockback or AoE. But ultimately no matter how you choose to skin Atomic Hearts’ android enemies, combat lacks the heft of its inspirations.
One reason for this is how hard Atomic Heart leans into collecting and crafting. Throughout the game you’re wearing a sentient super-glove, and everything you point it at will open and the goodies will zoom towards you. Remember the scene in Ghostbusters where the library cards start flying out of the drawers? In Atomic Heart you trigger this effect constantly and so far it hasn’t gotten old. In fact I enjoy it so much I think opening space cupboards individually in Starfield is going to drive me mad.
You can similarly schloop the resources out of downed foes (whose bodies or parts convulse as the bits fly out), and whatever you’re looting there’s a lovely glimpse of the shiny bits flying towards you: You instantly have a sense when you’ve scored something good. This side of it is a delight. But using all this junk to painstakingly build and upgrade weapons means most of your equipment and attacks are unimpressive until you can grind enough loot to give them more oomph.
I don’t mind that Atomic Heart copies the electro bolt plasmid. But it annoys me to no end that it feels so underpowered and, as I progressed through the upgrade tree, I was incrementally gaining abilities that the BioShock power it copied came with as standard. There were only a few rungs of the upgrade ladder to climb with plasmids in BioShock, but each one felt more substantial, and crucially the basic versions felt powerful and good to use in and of themselves. In Atomic Heart I saw no point building a new tool or weapon without having the resources to immediately upgrade it several times.
The game pretty much acknowledges this by including a system that refunds all resources for deconstructing any item. The idea is clearly that players should swap around and experiment with playstyles, but the cumbersome interface and its tiny icons mean the process is no pleasure, and most of the enemies don’t encourage or demand this flexibility. The one occasion I did do this was to build a specific weapon for an annoying boss, and it worked, but I didn’t especially like the weapon and ended up just deconstructing it again after the fight.
(Image credit: Mundfish)
Eastworld
Atomic Heart is a surprising, ambitious, deeply flawed game that at times feels close to greatness. It will take your breath away with a setpiece one minute, then make you spend the next 10 fiddling with an annoying puzzle while the protagonist swears about how annoying this puzzle is. It’s unbelievably crass in one breath, then delivers a cogent summary of contemporary issues around AI the next. I have no doubt it’ll become some sort of cult classic among a particular type of FPS player.
Inspiration is always a double-edged sword because of the comparison it invites, and Atomic Heart has been heavily inspired by the past. What lies beneath its glossy exterior, though, is an all-too-human sadness about the future of technological servitude it envisions. “Would be a nice place, if everyone wasn’t dead,” muses the protagonist at one point, a line so banal it’s almost comic. But you look at all these bodies slumped around, so many that after a while they’re like wallpaper, and the cleaning robots that heedlessly go back-and-forth on their manoeuvres in the aftermath, and it somehow lands.
This game has moments of frustration alongside the wonder, and in some areas pales in comparison to those inspirations: But it is always reaching for the stars. Even if Atomic Heart never quite fully grasps them, that has to count for something.
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