Compara los precios de Stories: The Path of Destinies en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Spearhead Games. Publicado por Spearhead Games. Lanzado el 12/4/2016. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG. Puntuación Metacritic: 74/100.

A fox pirate, a magic book, and 24 ways to fail spectacularly -- this branching action-RPG is built for players who find meaning in the loop, not just the finish line.

I kept coming back to this one long after I should have moved on, and not because the combat demanded it. Stories: The Path of Destinies has a specific kind of gravity that pulls you through run after run, each one a short, sharp chapter in a larger puzzle you slowly piece together. You play as Reynardo, a roguish, eyepatch-wearing fox caught up in a rebellion against a mad toad Emperor and his raven army, all set across a steampunk world of floating islands connected by grappling hooks and rope bridges. The world itself has a watercolor-and-storybook warmth to it, and the dynamic fantasy soundtrack does something rare: it actually shifts with your choices, making each path feel like it has its own emotional weather. The structure is the heart of it. Each run takes thirty to sixty minutes, and each ends with a binary or trinary branch -- rescue an old friend, chase a cursed gem, or seek a weapon lost at the beginning of time. You will make the wrong call. Reynardo will die, or someone he loves will, and the book closes. Then you start again, carrying every upgrade, every crafted sword, every unlocked skill forward into the next version of the story. The game tracks four immutable Truths scattered across its twenty-four possible endings, and finding all four is what eventually lets you construct the one victorious path. It sounds mechanical, but in practice it feels closer to reading the same fairy tale over and over until you finally understand what the author was hiding. The Truths mechanic is Spearhead's best invention here, because it means failure is never wasted. The narrator is the other reason to be here. Julian Casey performs every character in a single-voice fable style, shifting tone from swashbuckling derring-do to Lovecraftian dread to outright comedy within the same chapter. He will comment on you smashing pots. He will call out your sword-swinging at thin air. There are Dark Souls quotes, Firefox jokes, and a pun baked into the protagonist's name in French. If that sounds like too much, it occasionally is -- a minority of critics found the constant meta-humor wearing after a few runs, and that's a fair warning. But for the most part, the writing earns its wit, and the narration carries emotional weight in the moments that need it. Combat sits somewhere between Bastion's isometric hack-and-slash and the Batman: Arkham counter system, with exclamation marks appearing above enemies before they strike, giving you a window to dash-attack or counter. You unlock skills at altars scattered through the levels, with abilities like a grappling-hook shield-yank and a time-stop counter earned through the skill tree. Swords are crafted and upgraded using ore and essence, and each sword type also acts as a key to locked-off areas, so your crafting priorities shape which parts of the world you can reach. The RPG layer is light but present. The honest critique is that the combat pool is shallow for a game that asks you to replay its levels ten-plus times. Enemy variety runs dry around the midpoint of completion, and if you're chasing all twenty-four endings rather than just the true one, the back half starts to feel like work rather than play. Where Stories succeeds most completely is in knowing what it is. Each chapter is bite-sized. The whole thing tops out around four to twenty hours depending on how deep you dig. It was named Best Indie Game at the 2016 Canadian Videogame Awards, and while a later remastered update on Unreal Engine 4 smoothed out some early technical rough edges, the game never pretended to be bigger than it is. For players who love narrative puzzles wrapped in light action, who want something they can put down and pick up in forty-five minute sessions, who find looping runs meditative rather than tedious, this is a handcrafted little world that respects your time. For players who need mechanical depth in their combat or a story that resolves cleanly on a single playthrough, it will frustrate before it satisfies. Kai, Scout Team

Stories: The Path of Destinies

Stories: The Path of Destinies

12 abr 2016Spearhead Games
GamerScout opina

A fox pirate, a magic book, and 24 ways to fail spectacularly -- this branching action-RPG is built for players who find meaning in the loop, not just the finish line.

PCXbox
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Acerca de Stories: The Path of Destinies

I kept coming back to this one long after I should have moved on, and not because the combat demanded it. Stories: The Path of Destinies has a specific kind of gravity that pulls you through run after run, each one a short, sharp chapter in a larger puzzle you slowly piece together. You play as Reynardo, a roguish, eyepatch-wearing fox caught up in a rebellion against a mad toad Emperor and his raven army, all set across a steampunk world of floating islands connected by grappling hooks and rope bridges. The world itself has a watercolor-and-storybook warmth to it, and the dynamic fantasy soundtrack does something rare: it actually shifts with your choices, making each path feel like it has its own emotional weather. The structure is the heart of it. Each run takes thirty to sixty minutes, and each ends with a binary or trinary branch -- rescue an old friend, chase a cursed gem, or seek a weapon lost at the beginning of time. You will make the wrong call. Reynardo will die, or someone he loves will, and the book closes. Then you start again, carrying every upgrade, every crafted sword, every unlocked skill forward into the next version of the story. The game tracks four immutable Truths scattered across its twenty-four possible endings, and finding all four is what eventually lets you construct the one victorious path. It sounds mechanical, but in practice it feels closer to reading the same fairy tale over and over until you finally understand what the author was hiding. The Truths mechanic is Spearhead's best invention here, because it means failure is never wasted. The narrator is the other reason to be here. Julian Casey performs every character in a single-voice fable style, shifting tone from swashbuckling derring-do to Lovecraftian dread to outright comedy within the same chapter. He will comment on you smashing pots. He will call out your sword-swinging at thin air. There are Dark Souls quotes, Firefox jokes, and a pun baked into the protagonist's name in French. If that sounds like too much, it occasionally is -- a minority of critics found the constant meta-humor wearing after a few runs, and that's a fair warning. But for the most part, the writing earns its wit, and the narration carries emotional weight in the moments that need it. Combat sits somewhere between Bastion's isometric hack-and-slash and the Batman: Arkham counter system, with exclamation marks appearing above enemies before they strike, giving you a window to dash-attack or counter. You unlock skills at altars scattered through the levels, with abilities like a grappling-hook shield-yank and a time-stop counter earned through the skill tree. Swords are crafted and upgraded using ore and essence, and each sword type also acts as a key to locked-off areas, so your crafting priorities shape which parts of the world you can reach. The RPG layer is light but present. The honest critique is that the combat pool is shallow for a game that asks you to replay its levels ten-plus times. Enemy variety runs dry around the midpoint of completion, and if you're chasing all twenty-four endings rather than just the true one, the back half starts to feel like work rather than play. Where Stories succeeds most completely is in knowing what it is. Each chapter is bite-sized. The whole thing tops out around four to twenty hours depending on how deep you dig. It was named Best Indie Game at the 2016 Canadian Videogame Awards, and while a later remastered update on Unreal Engine 4 smoothed out some early technical rough edges, the game never pretended to be bigger than it is. For players who love narrative puzzles wrapped in light action, who want something they can put down and pick up in forty-five minute sessions, who find looping runs meditative rather than tedious, this is a handcrafted little world that respects your time. For players who need mechanical depth in their combat or a story that resolves cleanly on a single playthrough, it will frustrate before it satisfies.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaBranching NarrativeLoop MechanicIsometric Hack-and-SlashNarrator-DrivenCraft-to-UnlockSkill TreeMultiple EndingsShort Sessions

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
64-bit Windows 7, 64-bit Windows 8 (8.1) or 64-bit Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 8800 GTX, GT640, GT730, Radeon HD 5850, HD Graphics 530
Processor
Intel CPU Core i3-2500K 2.0GHz+ / AMD CPU Phenom II 570
Sound Card
Stereo

Recomendados

OS
64-bit Windows 7, 64-bit Windows 8 (8.1) or 64-bit Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 770, GPU Radeon HD 7870
Processor
Intel CPU Core i5 3770 3.4 GHz / AMD CPU Phenom II X4 940
Sound Card
Stereo

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
74

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Spearhead Games
Distribuidora
Spearhead Games
Fecha de lanzamiento
12 abr 2016

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Stories: The Path of Destinies?

Stories: The Path of Destinies está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Stories: The Path of Destinies?

Stories: The Path of Destinies se lanzó el 12 de abril de 2016.

¿Quién desarrolló Stories: The Path of Destinies?

Stories: The Path of Destinies fue desarrollado por Spearhead Games.

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Stories: The Path of Destinies tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 74/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Action. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.