duncanmalashock

Horror Game The Flock Has A Killer Idea, But It Feels Unfinished

By Dr. Evelyn Reed | January 01, 0001 | 7 min read

The Flock is a multiplayer horror game that ends after too many people die. Cool idea! The game itself? Freaky, but limited. Here’s how it works: you start out as a creepy gargoyle monster, one of the titular Flock. Your goal is to claim the Light Artifact, a fabled instrument yono all app from a time of all yono rummy eternal daw— OK YEAH it’s a flashlight. It’s a really shitty flashlight that stops working if you stop moving. At any given moment, one player has the Light Artiflashlight, and all the other players are hunting them. The flashlight player wants to reach and activate objective beacons (using the light, naturally), while the Flock players want to kill them before they can. Conveniently, the light reduces flock players to mottled stone and ash if you shine it on them while they’re moving. Inconveniently, it renders you completely defenseless otherwise. So, in short, Flock players stalk the Light Artifact player slowly—climbing cliffs and other platforms while trying to keep out of sight, standing stock still and turning to stone when the light shines on them—while the Light Artifact player scampers through the level going, “Oh jeez oh gosh oh whatwasthat” every time the floor wheezes and creaks or, you know, a fucking gargoyle monster appears right in their face. It’s like this: Oh hey, I’m just taking a walk with my good friend this ageless relic of immaculate glory and OH FUCK IT’S RIGHT THERE. Another time, I ended up reaching an objective—cheering in my heart of hearts that I’d survived the otherworldly horror gauntlet and was about to claim my prize—only to realize I was surrounded. They stood, statue-esque, waiting for y1 games latest my light to falter. It was only a matter of time; I knew it, they knew it. Then one of them would pounce. Sure enough: And yes, every time you die as a Light Artifact carrier or a Flock, the game reminds you that you wasted another life in the universal pool. Once there are zero lives left, nobody else will be able to buy the game, and it will go into some grand finale. After that, it’ll be yono all app offline forever. It definitely makes death feel a little weightier than, say, a simple kill-death ratio. Playing as the Flock is tense too, but in the opposite direction. You’re the hunter, not the hunted, but you’re also extremely vulnerable. A glass cannon, basically. Flock players are agile (though clunkily so; playing as them doesn’t feel good at all), so they can get a high ground advantage pretty easily. They can also make decoys of themselves, which is definitely handy when you’re stalking a player who’s trying to both keep tabs on you and trudge forward to their objective. So again, neat stuff, but that’s kinda… all of it. The Flock has three levels and one all yono rummy mode. It gets repetitive reeeeeeeally quickly. I’ve been playing for about an hour, and I’m already starting to get bored. Certainly, strategies will evolve over time, and players will get better at freaking each other out, but there’s only so much for them to work with. And again, this game just doesn’t feel good. Controls are unpolished, kludgy. So far, I love the idea behind The Flock—a giant doomsday clock y1 games latest literally triggered by death—but I’m not sure I’ll want to stick around long enough to see its grand finale. You’re reading Steamed, Kotaku’s page dedicated to all things in and around Valve’s stupidly popular PC gaming service. Games, culture, community creations, criticism, guides, videos—everything. If you’ve found anything cool/awful on Steam, send us an email to let us know. To contact the author of this post, write to [email protected] or find him on Twitter @vahn16

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