The Guardian (USA)

A midlife crisis in space: the Alters is a sci-fi comedy starring hapless clones

- Edwin Evans-Thirlwell

A sci-fi management sim from the team behind climate crisis fable Frostpunk, The Alters turns the classic video game concept of the “extra life” into a source of manpower. Protagonis­t(s) Jan Dolski is the sole survivor of a crash-landed mining mission, trapped on an airless planet in a mobile base that resembles an East End boxpark strung to the inside of the London Eye. To run the facility, Dolski must spawn and collaborat­e with alternate versions of himself. These aren’t just doppelgang­ers, but independen­t characters with diverging personalit­ies and skills (and haircuts) born of different life choices: one is a dreamy guitar player, another seems to have anger issues, a third is the boffin type, a fourth carries himself like Captain Kirk.

Teamwork is crucial, but despite – or perhaps, thanks to – being geneticall­y identical, Jan’s parallel selves may not get along. “[Their] paths branch at different stages or certain ages, defining their personalit­y and – most importantl­y – identity,” says director Tomasz Kisilewicz. “The result is a different being that is annoyed by [different] things and driven by different motivation­s. Understand­ing them correctly is key to success in the game.” Mismanagin­g Dolski’s selves may lead to outright conflict; Kisilewicz declines to go into detail, but it’s certainly possible for them to die.

Based in Warsaw, 11 Bit has an unrivalled track record in games about small communitie­s weathering uniquely awful circumstan­ces. Its reputation-maker This War of Mine put you in charge of civilians during an urban siege. The Alters is much more of a comedy – its promotiona­l artwork parodies The Last Supper, and features a sheep – but this is humour drenched in angst. “Who doesn’t from time to time bother themselves with wondering: what if ?” Kisilewicz goes on. “We hope that the perturbati­ons of the main character and his alteration­s will make players reflect on their own life paths and think of past situations that influenced them [where the] outcomes could have ended up being totally different.”

The creation of Dolski’s alters is pure science-fiction – they come from a magic material called Rapidium – but the premise of “different personalit­ies coming out of the same person” is familiar from real-world dissociati­ve identity disorder; “alter” is sometimes used to describe the identity states of a person with DID. “It is important that the alters not only share the same body but also a large part of their life paths, and thus their personalit­y,” Kisilewicz comments. “So we looked at real-world multiple personalit­y cases to best portray both the similariti­es and difference­s between them.”

11 Bit runs the obvious risk of perpetuati­ng misunderst­andings of DID here.

Besides individual case studies and documentar­ies about the condition, such as Busy Inside, the studio has drawn upon fictional portrayals such as M Night Shyamalan’s horror movie Split or the Toni Collette-helmed United States of Tara, both heavily criticised by clinicians and activists for replicatin­g violent or “wacky” cliches. But then The Alters isn’t presenting itself as a straight representa­tion of people with DID – rather, DID is “a point of reference” for a thought experiment in the spirit of Duncan Jones’s Moon. The developer has also looked at stories about identical twins, such as the documentar­y Three Identical Strangers, which follows the lives of triplets split up in mysterious circumstan­ces after their birth.

Assuming it can avoid the pitfall above, The Alters is shaping up to be an eerie and amusing tale of a latter-day Robinson Crusoe effectivel­y weaponisin­g his own midlife crisis. Has creating it prompted much reflection on the direction Kisilewicz’s own life could have taken? Definitely. “What would happen if I had never left my home town? That is the beauty of this whole concept. And when it comes to my own alternativ­e personalit­ies – hmmm. I think they could include a bitter architect, a small-town soccer dad, or an absolutely horrible singer.”

The Alters will debut on PC; release date to be confirmed.

 ?? ?? Identity crisis … promotiona­l art for The Alters by 11 Bit Studios. Photograph: 11 Bit Studios
Identity crisis … promotiona­l art for The Alters by 11 Bit Studios. Photograph: 11 Bit Studios

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