The Star Malaysia - Star2

Soothe the beasts

Serenade creatures and turn them into allies with your songs to repel the alien invaders.

- By GIESON CACHO

Although Battlefiel­d 1 earned plenty of accolades in 2016, another Electronic Arts game earned noteworthy praise. Unravel was the polar opposite of a typical project from the Redwood Citybased company.

Built in the indie spirit, the publisher helped the developer, Coldwood Interactiv­e, create a memorable 2D platformer that told a personal story. the success of Unravel helped spawn the EA originals programme, which is designed to foster small studios working on innovative and memorable projects.

the first official title from the label is Fe, a moody adventure game in the vein of Metroid. Players take on the role of the title character, which survives a devastatin­g attack on its forest world. Armed with the power of its voice, the fox-like creature Fe searches for survivors who have managed to avoid the invaders known as the Silent ones. Its goal is to rescue the wildlife and repel the outsiders.

Bold and beautiful

At first glance, Fe is reminiscen­t of Ori And The Blind Forest .the bold colours and simplistic character design echo the indie darling, but the studio, Zoink, created their adventure in a 3D world.

ultimately though, that comparison is superficia­l. Ori relied on precise platformin­g using controls that felt exquisitel­y responsive. on the other hand, Fe feels floaty and frustratin­gly sluggish.

thankfully, the single-payer doesn’t rely on quick-twitch movements. Fe is more explorator­y as players venture down ravines or scale cliffs using the vulpine protagonis­t’s abilities. It can climb trees like a squirrel, and later on as players collect gems, Fe’s abilities expand to include a glide, sprint and dive.

these are helpful moves, but other than the glide, they aren’t necessary for progress. Instead, Zoink crafts a game centred on Fe learning the language of the beasts that it rescues. taught in the form of songs, the voices open up more of the woodland world by unlocking the plant life of the land.

that interwoven relationsh­ip between flower and fauna is central to Fe. learning the song of birds allows the hero to open the green petals and grab a substance that dissolves cages that the Silent ones use to capture the creatures. Elsewhere, Fe will come across a beast holding an egg. Players will have to find a berry to essentiall­y trade with the animal, so that a mother bird can have all her eggs back.

Songs also have a secondary purpose: Fe can serenade other creatures and make them temporary allies. this allows Fe to fly to new areas or take shortcuts in a relatively open world.

Lover not a fighter

Because of its small stature, Fe isn’t necessaril­y a fighter. Whenever it encounters a Silent one or its minions, players will have to hide the hero in patches of tall grass. this creates decent stealth gameplay, in which players have to avoid foes or sing to allies who can defeat them. In addition to sneaking around, Fe can also grab and throw objects. this is key to destroying some of the devices the Silent ones use to subdue the larger beasts.

Altogether, Fe is a solid game, but it runs across trouble with its wordless storytelli­ng. the game unfolds without any storytelli­ng text, and this can be a problem in the beginning, especially with the quest design. Explaining gameplay ideas and puzzles is difficult enough but doing it with just pictures can be an exercise in frustratio­n.

the other issue is that Fe still has bugs that pull players out of the hypnotical­ly beautiful game. one time a screen went all white and froze. I had to exit out. Another time a key object didn’t activate, leaving me without any direction for 10 minutes. thankfully, a forgiving autosave system makes up for this flawed, but otherwise solid offering from EA originals. — the Mercury News/tribune News Service

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