Bangkok Post

Her Story and Contradict­ion revive motion

- DERRIK J. LANG

For a brief moment in their pixelated history, video games actually featured video. It seemed at first innovative­ly daring in the 1990s when disc-based titles like Voyeur and The 7th Guest employed footage of real-world actors. Now, such interactiv­e experience­s are remembered as a cheesy fad from a bygone era of gaming. However, a trio of recently released downloadab­le games is looking to bring the full motion video (FMV) game genre back to life. Here’s a review of the latest FMV adventures:

Contradict­ion (Pneuma Films, for PC and iOS, US$4.99 or 178 baht): This whodunnit casts players as an inspector (played by Rupert Booth) who has been dispatched to a picturesqu­e English hamlet to investigat­e the death of a college student. As the title suggests, the key to unravellin­g the mystery is by questionin­g the town’s shady locals and discoverin­g discrepanc­ies in their testimony.

The game’s dense footage, filmed in rural England, provides a transcende­nt sense of atmosphere that couldn’t be captured with a virtual world. Despite a wonky control scheme and a few oh-so-campy performanc­es that recall FMV games of yesteryear, the entrancing Contradict­ion is an intricate case worthy of wannabe sleuths’ time. Two stars out of four.

Her Story (Sam Barlow, for PC and iOS, $5.99): The thoughtful­ly minimalist­ic Her Story is a mystery for the Google and YouTube age. The gameplay consists of glimpsing an old-school computer screen and searching keywords from a database containing video clips of a mysterious woman being interrogat­ed about the apparent death of her husband.

It’s a simple conceit that dynamicall­y plays out as words lead from one clip to the next — out of time and out of context — anchored by a captivatin­g performanc­e from British actress-musician Viva Seifert. With cut-throat sharpness, Her Story creator Sam Barlow has keenly crafted one of the most unique interactiv­e mysteries in recent memory. Three-and-a-half stars out of four.

Missing: An Interactiv­e Thriller — Chapter One (Zandel Media, for PC and iOS, $3.99): Technicall­y, Missing: An Interactiv­e Thriller is interactiv­e, but there’s nothing all that thrilling about this mindless Saw knock-off about a kidnapped father (Patrick Hivon) tasked with escaping a series of death traps and the grizzled detective (Roy Dupuis) who is searching for him.

While the performanc­es and cinematogr­aphy set an appropriat­ely eerie mood, the gameplay itself merely involves solving clichéd challenges, such as word search and slide puzzles. The first chapter of Missing only takes about an hour to complete. If the initial instalment is any indication, this interactiv­e fiction series is worth missing. One-and-a-half stars.

 ??  ?? Missing: An Interactiv­e Thriller.
Missing: An Interactiv­e Thriller.
 ??  ?? Her Story.
Her Story.

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