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Firewatch
Firewatch







firewatch

There are no neat endings in real life, so there’s no reason that I deserve them in video games. Unlike Tom I did feel a little shortchanged by the conclusion of Firewatch, but I suspect that’s mostly because I’m a demanding child. Second Opinion: Alice ‘likes to pick up litter’ Bell Henry has things to face up to and you won’t feel shortchanged by the game’s conclusion. Firewatch is a brief adventure, but it feels right. Henry, his struggles and choices, have stuck with me for the last couple of days, so I don’t think it needs any deeper meaning. It’s hard to say if Firewatch is simply a snapshot of a small part of a particularly hard part of someone’s life or if it’s saying something more. Don’t hold out too much, though, as the game is over in an afternoon of solid play. You’re given a camera to take a limited number of snaps with, and it’s hard not to splurge them all in a matter of minutes. The use of colour is wonderful and the little details you can find help flesh out and explain what’s going on.

FIREWATCH PS4

On PS4 Firewatch has some performance issues and looks a tad ropey if you look at it from a technical perspective, but get over that and this is a beautiful game. The dialogue is excellent and the acting natural, and there’s some sparingly used but effective music. I guess I just wanted to speak to somebody. Your only connection to humanity is Delilah, and I found myself trying to radio her even when there was no option to do so. This isn’t a horror game, not even close, but the sense of isolation is played on superbly, so even little things get under your skin. As you complete tasks days pass (often more than one at a time) and things start to develop that suggest all isn’t right.ĭiscovering what’s going on is part of the Firewatch experience, but the game does a brilliant job of unnerving you. It’s all single-button-press stuff rather than anything overly ‘gamey’ but it’s interactive and gives the sense that you are out there, doing your job. Henry is given tasks that see him set out into the great outdoors, wandering around in first-person, hopping over obstacles, climbing up to ledges, parasailing down cliff faces, hacking down trees and all kinds of other things you might expect someone to do when trying to make sure people aren’t causing trouble in the forest. While the relationship begins a bit awkwardly (Delilah is Henry’s boss so is always telling him what to do) it soon develops and the two open up to each other and discuss their complicated lives. You can make conversation choices and this shapes how things play out – at one point I pissed Delilah off so she refused to talk to me for a while. It’s somewhat revealing, then, that it is Henry’s relationship with his boss, fellow firewatch station sitter, Delilah, that forms the centrepiece of the game.Īrmed with a two-way radio, Henry and Delilah talk. For reasons I won’t go into, this is fine. He’s going to be alone most of the time, sat at his post ready to report any sign of fire. Henry takes a job at a firewatch station in Wyoming’s Shoshone National Forest. From a team who cut their teeth on Telltale’s The Walking Dead, Firewatch feels like a natural and smart evolution, offering choices without as many constraints, but at the same time expertly funneling players down a path.

firewatch

Firewatch is a game about escape, loneliness, friendship and facing reality, told in a tightly controlled explorable world and with some top class writing and acting.

firewatch firewatch

Firewatch isn’t any of the things I expected it to be.









Firewatch