I've
done horrible and horrifying things to thousands of innocent virtual people in
games, beginning with squishing friendlies in 1982's Choplifter, progressing to
murdering farmers in their beds in Oblivion, and most recently by sending
scores of pedestrians ragdolling through the air with my speeding car in Grand
Theft Auto 5. At times I've enjoyed the violent acts I've committed against
bystanders, at other times my own actions have troubled me, and there have been
plenty of occasions where I've never given them a second thought. Killing
bystanders in games, for whatever the reason—accidentally, purposefully, out of
boredom or morbid curiosity—is nothing new to gaming.
Hatred,
an isometric twin-stick shooter from Polish developer Destructive Creations, doesn't
just include the killing of innocent bystanders, but features it as its primary
activity. The unnamed character you control explains that he's sick of the
world and the people in it, and would like to kill as many people as he can
before dying violently himself. After gathering weapons he stalks through
residential neighborhoods, busy town centers, a moving passenger train, an army
base, and ultimately a nuclear power plant, gunning down everyone he sees to
make his dark vision a reality.
How
does it feel having killed a couple thousand of innocent people in Hatred? As I
said, killing bystanders in a game can result in a number of different
reactions and feelings. It can be a mild feeling of guilt, such as when I
crowbar a friendly Barney to death in Half-Life because I want to take his ammo
clip with me. It's often fun and humorous, like when visiting over-the-top
destruction on entire city blocks in the Saints Row series. Killing innocents
can be a means to an end or a solution to a problem, as in the Hitman games
when I kill a janitor for his uniform, and it can provide a sense of grim
satisfaction when I'm roleplaying a ruthless assassin in a Bethesda RPG.
Sometimes the feeling is hard to define, a sort of sickening and fascinating
revulsion with myself—why am I doing this?—such
as when watching a character in The Sims slowly die from starvation while
sitting in a puddle of his own filth because I've trapped him in a room for
reasons I can't entirely explain.
In
Hatred, I didn't feel any of that, and I suspect much of the reason why has to
do with the quality of the game itself.
None more black
For a game that's mostly about
running and shooting, there are a few problems with both. The shooting
occasionally feels off: putting the crosshairs on a target usually means the
bullets will hit them, but from time to time I found that aiming slightly next
to them was required for a hit. Other times, at nearly point blank range, I'd
fire repeatedly at someone and somehow hit absolutely nothing, even with a shotgun.
Then again, sometimes I'd shoot on the run and easily take down multiple
targets. The ultimate feeling is one of inconsistency, and the end result is a
lot of wasted rounds shooting at someone who somehow doesn't get hit.
Having to keep an eye on the minimap
to pinpoint threats, and many of those threats shooting at me from offscreen,
meant I often lost track of my character, who would wind up stuck on the
corners of buildings, doors, foliage, and other objects. The environment can be
confusing: some hedges you can run straight through while other, smaller shrubs
sometimes stop you short. Jumping over objects is possible, performed
automatically while sprinting, though it's inconsistent as well: some obstacles
don't allow you to vault them when they appear they should.
This clumsy navigation is
exacerbated by Hatred's visuals. It's presented in mostly black and
white—things like explosions and explosive items, taillights and security
locks, and some set dressing like billboards and banners provide bright
splashes of color. I think this is a neat idea, and I do really like the look
of the world, but limiting the game to black and white requires a real mastery
of design that's unfortunately absent here. Smoothly moving a small character
clad in black on a black night through a black forest while spotting enemies
(they're dark gray, at least) isn't an easy feat to manage.
Your
character is not some superman capable of absorbing massive amounts of damage.
Slow, deliberate assaults against the police and later the army are required,
as are frequent retreats. This is initially more interesting than charging
mindlessly into combat, and I did find early fights with armed forces fun.
Eventually, though, forced to progress inch-by-inch through the maps while
frequently falling back to regroup or lose pursuers, the game becomes a slow
and repetitive trudge, since progress is almost always based on killing a
specific number of targets as opposed to reaching a destination. The only
change as you progress is more enemies that take more shots to put down instead
of any real evolution of gameplay, and the handful of different guns you can
use don't add much variety. While there are a few optional objectives on each
map, they're almost always the same: kill X amount of people in a certain
location, and most levels end with similar standoffs against swarms of law
enforcement. There's also driving, for which the controls are comically bad,
though thankfully it's only briefly required in a couple of missions.
Poor execution
The
only way to heal your wounds is by performing an 'execution', in which you
stand near a wounded victim and press the Q key to finish them off. This
results in an animation in which you stab the victim in the head, cut their
throat, stomp their head into mush, or bonk them with the butt of your gun.
While I appreciate that the developers went looking for a different way to heal
besides collecting health kits or auto-healing while at rest, the execution
system is pretty terrible in all respects. Since you're unable to deliberately
wound people (in a third- or first-person shooter you might be able to target
limbs, for example) it means that trying to restore health can result in long,
dull stretches of running around, shooting stragglers, and simply hoping to wound
someone rather than kill them outright. Ultimately, this turns out to be even
more of a hassle than hunting for health kits and takes longer than
auto-healing would.
The
executions themselves, both for the gore-factor and from an animation standpoint,
are rather underwhelming, with fakey looking blood and unconvincing character
movements, and within a few minutes of play you'll have seen most of the
handful of animations. Whatever effect executions are supposed to have on the
player (glee? revulsion?) will wear off long before you've even completed the
first level.
It's
not all bad news. The environments themselves are great: big, sprawling maps to
romp through, nicely designed buildings, some great set dressing, and a
convincing level of detail. The destructive environments are fantastic. Gunfire
will leave walls crumbling and windows shattered, grenades can create new
entrances or exits in most structures, big and satisfying explosions routinely
light up the screen. A protracted confrontation in a building results in the
structure becoming a gutted, flaming mess and leaves you feeling like a badass
for stalking out of the smoldering ruins in one piece.
I
enjoyed the second level, in which you must navigate through a sewer system
while SWAT teams slip down ladders for periodic confrontations. I felt this,
and a trip through a nuclear plant at the end, were a nice change because they
were a bit more linear, giving me a real direction to travel, giving me chances
to plan my approach and crouch behind cover when enemies advanced. I felt like
I was fighting my way through something, as opposed to the vague,
free-form assaults the open maps provide.
Not
all citizens in Hatred are helpless targets. Some have guns of their own,
others will pick up guns dropped in the street and fire back. This idea of the
danger of armed bystanders culminates in a level where an optional objective is
to kill everyone at a gun show, and I laughed when I ran in the door and saw a
dozen people promptly grab weapons off tables and pump me full of lead.
Ironically, I suppose, for a game built around massacring innocents, it's far
more fun when they fight back and you're not simply offing pedestrians until
you meet your quota. Seeing a woman in a grocery store pick up a gun, empty a clip
at me, and shout "reloading!" as if she were part of a trained
commando squad was funny, and any time a citizen did something other than
slowly and ineptly flee my gunshots was a welcome change.
Brain dead
No
matter who is holding a gun, however, Hatred's A.I. is underwhelming and at
times entirely broken. On one map, after slaughtering a house full of people, I
hit my murder quota and was told a SWAT team was arriving: I'd have to survive
the raid and kill 20 cops to progress. I hunkered down in a bedroom on the
second floor of the house and waited for them to swarm up the stairs, hoping to
pick them off one at a time. As it turns out, only one cop was actually trained
in the delicate art of using the stairs. The rest milled around on the first
floor for long minutes while I waited, apparently able to see me through the
floor but not actually able to shoot me through it. More and more cops poured
into the lower level of the house until it was a teeming mob of idiots getting
caught in their own crossfire. I eventually passed the mission due to 19
separate friendly-fire incidents because no one taught the police to climb
stairs and not to aim through each other's bodies.
On
another map I had to personally destroy the walls of a bank with grenades to
allow the police to move through the building toward me, just so I could then
kill them. Molotov cocktails, meanwhile, become useful when you realize the
lake of fire they create doesn't register as a threat to police, who will
voluntarily wade in and out of it until they've burned themselves to a crisp. I
actually stopped playing at one point to check if Hatred was in Early
Access instead of full release, because it genuinely feels like a beta.
While
the idea of massacring innocents in a game will turn of plenty of people off
and genuinely upset some, I found nothing about the experience daring, novel,
or even particularly shocking. Maybe it's that the people are so poorly
simulated, maybe it's that the execution animations are so unconvincing, maybe
it's that the game just isn't very good. Last year, the developers said they
created Hatred in response to the trend of political correctness in games, but
if that was their true mission statement I'm afraid I don't see it reflected in
the semi-finished product. Much more likely, this statement simply represented
the marketing plan to promote their substandard shooter (and it's hard to argue
that plan wasn't a successful one). Ultimately, in Hatred, killing innocent
people is just a way to make the cops arrive, and I can do that—plus dozens of
other, actually fun things—in a game like GTA 5.
There
are a few things I enjoyed about Hatred, but its many and major flaws quickly
turned it into a largely forgettable shooter that grew less and less
interesting the longer I played. For those hoping for a game in which killing
innocent people provides you with some sort of entertainment—be it humor,
revulsion, guilt, a vicarious and morbid thrill—you can find it done better, in
one way or another, in every other game I've mentioned in this review.
Need To Know
Reviewed on: Intel i7 x980 3.33 GHz, 9 GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 960
Play it on: Intel i5 2.6Ghz, 4GB RAM, Nvidia 460/AMD HD5850
Copy Protection: Steam
Price: $20 / £15
Release date: Out now
Multiplayer: No
Link: Steam store page
Developer/Publisher: Destructive Creations
Multiplayer: No
ESRB: AO
Play it on: Intel i5 2.6Ghz, 4GB RAM, Nvidia 460/AMD HD5850
Copy Protection: Steam
Price: $20 / £15
Release date: Out now
Multiplayer: No
Link: Steam store page
Developer/Publisher: Destructive Creations
Multiplayer: No
ESRB: AO
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