Glaswegian Hayley Foster has spent the last two years sharing a flat with
her best friend Alex. Unbeknown to the rest of the world Alex is in
fact Hayley’s guardian angel. But their attempts to live quietly were
shattered when an old enemy returned to their lives and continues to
hound them at every turn.
Following on directly from the ending of Crashing Down to Earth, the
final part of the Stars and Satellites series sees Alex trying to stop
his fallen brother Gabriel from killing Hayley and everyone close to
him, while facing up to the horrific secret that has haunted him for
millennia.
The Boy Who Played With Stars is available on ebook format from Amazon here.
Sunday, 30 November 2014
Monday, 24 November 2014
Assassin's Creed Unity Review
It's November again and as inevitable as Christmas coming our way, Ubisoft have released yet another Assassin's Creed game. But why have one when you can have two this time? One (Assassin's Creed Rogue) is an Xbox 360 only game focusing on pirating and the other (Assassin's Creed Unity) is only for the new generation consoles, namely the Xbox One and Playstation Four.
For this review we will be focusing solely on the latter which is set during the French Revolution. For those uninitiated with the series, Assassin's Creed is a game series that follows the eternal war between two factions of humanity, the Assassin's and the Templars. You play as an assassin (yes, it's hard to believe that they're the good guys when I describe it like that).
In Unity you play as Arno, and orphaned aristrocrat (at least I think he is), who grows up to be a waste of space. But after being accused of murder and thrown into the Bastille, and learning of the Assassin's Brotherhood - who Arno's father worked for - you begin your life training to become a master assassin while trying to unravel the mystery of who killed your father and why.
Unity makes a welcome return to the core gameplay I loved in previous titles, namely the stealth and the endless freerunning over rooftops as far as the eye can see. More recent titles like Creed 3 and Black Flag scrapped this to focus the games on other things, but for me it always left the impression that both were missing something. Besides the reintroduction of all the freerunning though, there is not really much new weaponwise or movewise brought to Unity.
Visually you can also see a clear difference in the definition and detail between Unity and older titles. The detail on the buildings and the quality of the characters faces are most notable. Even very recent Creed games like Black Flag, which only came out last year, still suffered from what I like to call "cardboard box" head characters.
The multiplayer mode has had the biggest facelift. While playing the single-player mode you can join mini missions with either friends or random players. There is a wide range of different missions and playing them can really help towards upgrades to your character in the single player game. In previous games I found the multiplayer was often repetitive and got boring very quickly.
But sadly, besides the multiplayer, Unity has not really brought anything new to the table. This is a good game with great visuals and a lot of play in it, but it does rely a little too heavily on its core mechanics rather than trying new things. Like many other reviewers I really wish this game was held back in development for a few more months as the number of glitches it had on the first day of playing was inexcusable.
It gets 7/10.
For this review we will be focusing solely on the latter which is set during the French Revolution. For those uninitiated with the series, Assassin's Creed is a game series that follows the eternal war between two factions of humanity, the Assassin's and the Templars. You play as an assassin (yes, it's hard to believe that they're the good guys when I describe it like that).
In Unity you play as Arno, and orphaned aristrocrat (at least I think he is), who grows up to be a waste of space. But after being accused of murder and thrown into the Bastille, and learning of the Assassin's Brotherhood - who Arno's father worked for - you begin your life training to become a master assassin while trying to unravel the mystery of who killed your father and why.
Unity makes a welcome return to the core gameplay I loved in previous titles, namely the stealth and the endless freerunning over rooftops as far as the eye can see. More recent titles like Creed 3 and Black Flag scrapped this to focus the games on other things, but for me it always left the impression that both were missing something. Besides the reintroduction of all the freerunning though, there is not really much new weaponwise or movewise brought to Unity.
Visually you can also see a clear difference in the definition and detail between Unity and older titles. The detail on the buildings and the quality of the characters faces are most notable. Even very recent Creed games like Black Flag, which only came out last year, still suffered from what I like to call "cardboard box" head characters.
The multiplayer mode has had the biggest facelift. While playing the single-player mode you can join mini missions with either friends or random players. There is a wide range of different missions and playing them can really help towards upgrades to your character in the single player game. In previous games I found the multiplayer was often repetitive and got boring very quickly.
But sadly, besides the multiplayer, Unity has not really brought anything new to the table. This is a good game with great visuals and a lot of play in it, but it does rely a little too heavily on its core mechanics rather than trying new things. Like many other reviewers I really wish this game was held back in development for a few more months as the number of glitches it had on the first day of playing was inexcusable.
It gets 7/10.
Friday, 14 November 2014
Alien Isolation: First Impressions
The game I’m looking at this week comes from a sci-fi series that everyone is familiar with…not unless you’ve lived in a cave on a remote island for the last four decades with bees in your ears.
Anyway enough about bees. The game I’m looking at
this week is Alien Isolation. I still haven’t finished this yet so I’m going to
be giving a rare first impressions review of it instead.
Basically the story is set 15 years after the events
of the original film. You play Amanda Ripley (Ripley’s grown-up daughter) who
is sent to a distant space station to collect the flight recorder of her mother’s
missing ship, the Nostromo. However, when you arrive it quickly becomes apparent
that something is very wrong on the station. The game then becomes a race to
retrieve the flight recorded and escape with your life before the alien gets
you.
Alien Isolation is genuinely terrifying. You cannot
kill the alien, regardless of whatever new goodies you find as your progress.
You must be quiet and you must be sneaky at all times while trying to work your
way around a predominantly dark environment and also get by rogue androids -
the Working Joes - and jumpy, armed survivors. The sounds are well timed, the jump scares are spot
on and the randomness of the alien’s appearance will keep you on edge.
Tune in soon to get my full review of the game.
Monday, 3 November 2014
To the Front Line: Fury Movie Review
Not for the faint hearted, Fury is full on with
blood, death and gore from the opening credits. Starring Brad Pitt, it tells
the story of a group of ordinary soldiers on the front line in Germany in April
1945, just months before the end of the Second World War.
The movie opens with Staff Sergeant Don Collier
(Pitt) having to come to terms with his ill-equipped and ill-prepared replacement
assistant driver and gunner after his original crew member is killed in battle.
The replacement is Norman Ellison (Logan Lerman), a typist who has never even been inside a tank
before.
The film is much a
story about Norman becoming the soldier he’s expected to be and the rest of the
crew coming to accept him in some of the most terrifying and difficult
environments anyone could ever face. I felt the movie tried hard with this but
it did struggle. There is a lot of raw emotion and great acting, especially
from Pitt and Lerman. Pitt is exceptional as the Sergeant on the verge of
breaking down but struggling to keep it together for his crew.
However, the
character development is a little paltry despite some good performances and is
easily overshadowed by the war itself. The fight scenes are gripping viewing,
brutal, relentless and bloody; a believable testament to the realities of war.
The sets are also very impressive. Purely judging this as a war film, Fury is a
great two hour flick.
It gets 8/10.
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