
Lifeless Planet Premier Edition
Cold War sci-fi mystery wrapped in a four-to-six-hour walk across a dead world - gripping if the premise hooks you, punishing if it doesn't.
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About Lifeless Planet Premier Edition
My honest first reaction to Lifeless Planet was something close to awe, and then, about ninety minutes later, something close to frustration, and then, somewhere near the end, something that felt quietly profound. That emotional rollercoaster is basically the whole review in miniature. This is a solo creation from developer David Board, a one-person project that somehow conjures an entire alien world, and that handcraft is impossible to ignore even when the seams are showing. The setup is genuinely arresting. You crash-land on a planet that was supposed to be teeming with life. Instead: barren red desert, a dead sky, and then - over a ridge - an abandoned Soviet town sitting there like a fever dream. The juxtaposition of Cold War infrastructure on an alien world is the game's single best idea, and it earns real emotional weight. The story unfolds through audio logs, scattered text, and a mysterious Russian woman named Aelita whose footsteps leave glowing green trails in the soil, guiding you through hazardous terrain. The protagonist narrates his own grief and confusion as he moves, and the voice work is understated enough that the loneliness actually lands. Rich Douglass's score, added for this Premier Edition, is the quiet hero of the whole thing - moody, spacious, the kind of music that makes empty vistas feel genuinely vast rather than merely underpopulated. Mechanically, the game is a third-person platformer held together with light puzzle work and a jetpack that provides brief bursts of lift. Collectible red fuel canisters let you chain longer jumps, and a mobile grabber arm lets you drag objects to activate switches and power sources. None of it is challenging in the conventional sense. The puzzles - moving moss power sources to outlets, blowing up barriers with dynamite, pressing sequences of buttons - exist mainly to pace out the story rather than test the player. Some players will find that meditative. Others will find it thin. Both reactions are correct. What is less defensible is the platforming itself, which carries a floatiness that the jetpack mechanic only partly explains. Certain jumps feel inconsistent in ways that have nothing to do with skill, and the controls retain a stiffness that reviewers noticed at launch and nobody ever patched away. The linearity is also a point worth being honest about. The maps look open but funnel you along a single path, and the illusion of exploration collapses the moment you try to deviate. That said, the level design does something clever to compensate: it uses subtle environmental cues - a flicker of distant light, a rock formation slightly too angular to be natural, a green patch on otherwise dead ground - to guide you forward without explicit signposting. When this works, it feels like the best kind of environmental storytelling. When it fails, you are just walking in circles on a dust plain. Lifeless Planet is ultimately a story delivery system wearing a game's clothes. If you accept that framing early - treat it like an interactive Cold War science fiction novella with light platforming interruptions rather than a puzzle-platformer with narrative ambitions - the four-to-six hour runtime clicks into place. The conclusion is satisfying and specific, which is rarer than it should be. The Premier Edition adds new music and previously unreleased audio and text logs that flesh out the Soviet storyline, making this the version worth playing if you are coming in fresh. It is rough around too many edges to recommend without caveats, but the atmosphere, the score, and the central mystery kept me walking forward every time the controls annoyed me enough to think about stopping. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 8 or 10
- Memory
- 1500 MB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0c
- Storage
- 900 MB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce GT 430 or ATI equivalent
- Processor
- Core 2 Duo or AMD equivalent
- Sound Card
- DX9.0c compatible
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10
- Memory
- 3000 MB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 10
- Storage
- 900 MB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA Geforce GT 640 or faster
- Processor
- Intel Core i3 or faster
- Sound Card
- DX9.0c compatible
DLC & Add-ons for Lifeless Planet Premier Edition1
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Game Info
- Developer
- Serenity Forge
- Publisher
- Serenity Forge
- Release Date
- Jun 6, 2014
