Upvote (200) Leave Blank View Comments (89) 8 Great About GameSpot Reviews The Good Excellent. By routinely withholding its best card in favour of non-interactive sequences of narrative meandering, Superhot doesn’t let the promise of its central mechanic speak for itself. Superhot is a clever game with deep, hidden elements that require committed and thorough examination. It’s been said that the best criticism you can give of a game is that you were left wanting more of it, and that’s entirely true of SuUPERHOT. As a post-modern meta-fable about our obsession with technology and digital immersion, SUPERHOT’s story isn’t meritless, but as soon as more exposition or symbolic imagery took over the screen, all I wanted to do was get back into the slo-mo skirmishes and stylised gameplay that the game has become rightly famous for.
#Superhot pc review code#
The game was reviewed on the PC using a download code provided by the Superhot Team. GameSpot was provided with a complimentary copy of Superhot for this. Superhot: Mind Control Delete is out now on PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One. Though priced at $25, the game can be completed in around two to three hours, an unfortunate amount of which is spent trawling through fake chat rooms, wandering empty spaces, and navigating intentionally awkward menus. Before writing his review, Peter spent the better part of a day completing every story level and a handful of challenge levels.
This problem is a byproduct of SUPERHOT’s wider issue of brevity.