Wireframe - #34 - 2020

(Elliott) #1
60 / wfmag.cc

Review

Rated


GENRE
Strategy /
Visual novel
FORMAT
PC (tested) /
Mac
DEVELOPER
Paintbucket
Games
PUBLISHER
HandyGames
PRICE
£13.49
RELEASE
Out now

Info


Review

Slim, stylish strategy with something to say


s the air raid sirens echo over
the streets of Berlin, frightened
Germans crowd into metro tunnels
for shelter. Falling bombs whistle
above. My character, a procedurally
named member of an unnamed resistance
movement, notices a flash of yellow on a nearby
man’s folded coat: a Star of David.
It’s 1945, there are few Jews left in the German
capital, and none that do remain should be
allowed in the tunnel during an air raid. I have the
option to warn the man that his star is showing,
saving him from harassment or worse. Then, I
have the option to stash his jacket and let him
borrow mine. A moment later, when the tunnel
collapses, he offers a hand to pull me out of the
rubble. When we emerge from the wreckage, he
thanks me, and we go our separate ways.
Through the Darkest of Times succeeds in these
moments. Developer Paintbucket Games excels at
telling the human stories of life under devastating
oppression. The game’s at-times-jazzy, at-times-
eerie score, red-white-and-black colour palette,
and staccato dialogue combine to create a tense
and unsettling world. The game uses touchstone
phrases like “drain the swamp” and “fake news”
to draw parallels between Nazi Germany and
Trump’s America, but it doesn’t need to. Through
the Darkest of Times brilliantly captures the queasy
hopelessness that comes with the dawning

realisation that the people you care about may
proudly support naked cruelty.
The problem is, Through the Darkest of Times
is being marketed as a strategy game. And for
roughly half of its ten-hour campaign, it is. But, at
least on the less challenging of the two difficulty
settings it offers, succeeding in this aspect requires
little thought. As the leader of a resistance group,
you recruit new members, maintain morale, and
manage finances. You accomplish this by selecting
activities for each party member to perform.
Some, like asking for donations, bring in money.
Others, like buying red paint to scrawl anti-Reich
graffiti, take it away. Each mission carries a degree
of risk which can be ameliorated by assigning party
members with certain skills or equipping helpful
items, like a stolen SA uniform or a fake passport.
All of this, conceptually, is interesting. In practice,
it feels simple after a few hours of play. I never
worried that I might fail, and I only dipped into the
red once. Again, I’ve only dabbled with the harder
difficulty, dubbed ‘Resistance Mode,’ but in ‘Story
Mode’ the strategy bits felt like a boring distraction
from the game’s gripping, visual novel narrative.
Through the Darkest of Times may have been
more compelling as a purely narrative-driven
experience. Despite some sleepy strategy
sections, Paintbucket does an excellent job of
connecting the authoritarianism of the past to the
authoritarianism of the present.

Through the


Darkest of Times


A


VERDICT
Through the Darkest of
Times is rarely compelling
as a strategy game, but
its narrative of resistance
in Nazi Germany is
frequently gripping.

68 %


 Before each strategic section, brief
scenes will play out between party
members in the resistance’s HQ.

HIGHLIGHT
Through the Darkest of Times
smartly captures the numb
fear and near-hopelessness
of life under tyranny. Though
we, as the player, know
that Hitler will eventually
fall, struggling through a
virtual decade of resistance
makes the inevitable seem
almost impossible.

REVIEWED BY
Andrew King


Review

Rated


 The parallels that
Paintbucket Games draw
between our current
political climate and Nazi
Germany are welcome,
but not always subtle.
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