Edge - UK (2020-10)

(Antfer) #1

Come on, you raver,


you seer of visions


This year started out dark, and proceeded to get even darker. When the


horizon looks indistinct, it’s the trailblazers that we need the most: those


who are confident enough to charge ahead into the unknown, like a


beacon, for the collective benefit of everybody following behind.


Arthouse videogame festival A Maze Berlin has been doing exactly that


for 12 years now. Set up to spotlight the kind of openly political games the


mainstream industry wouldn’t touch with a ten-foot pole, over the years it’s


become a staple community event. After the festival’s funding request was


rejected last year, and a pandemic hit at the beginning of this one, any


sensible organisation might have admitted defeat. Fortunately, A Maze is


anything but sensible. In Knowledge this month, we talk to its founder


about how his team translated a physical convention to an all-digital


experience – all while protecting its core values. The answer involves more


flamingos than you might expect.


On the other end of the spectrum is publishing giant Microsoft, which


recently unveiled a next-gen strategy that – while not exactly unexpected


for those of us who’ve been paying close attention to what it has been


doing with Game Pass for the last few years – takes a different view to its


competitors as to what next-gen gaming should be: creative, diverse and,


above all, accessible. Outside The Box takes a look at just some of the


titles coming to Xbox Series X via Microsoft’s subscription service.


But one in particular deserved a spot on our cover. That game is


Psychonauts 2, the long-awaited sequel to Double Fine’s brilliant and


unabashedly bizarre 3D platformer – which we’ve played before any


other media outlet. Psychonauts has always been ahead of its time: back


in 2005, its brain-hopping premise touched on themes that the high-profile


videogames of today are only just daring to tackle. But right now, it feels


very of the moment. When things get dark, it’s those who stay true to


themselves, and each other, who shine brightest. The story begins on p54.


Special glow-in-the-dark cover
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