How the Steam Deck breathes life into underrated old games
I am obsessed with my Steam Deck. I received Valve’s handheld gaming computer in May of this year, and it has quickly become my favorite console of all time. After a period of serious media burnout, it’s made me fall in love with games all over again, and I’ve finished more games in the past six months than I have in previous years. As you might expect, the rest of my consoles have been gathering dust ever since.
To illustrate how deep the rabbit hole goes, even when there’s an exclusive PlayStation or Xbox game to check out, I’m using remote play services like Chiaki and Greenlight so I can play them on my Steam Deck. God of War: Ragnarok sings on the big screen, sure, but what if you could play it from the comfort of your bed, compromise-free? In an attention-economy-addled world, that’s a gambit I’m interested in.
The bespoke nature of the Steam Deck, with its tinker-friendly Linux base and easy access to the desktop, means that it’s able to play more games than anything else you can fit between your palms. Even complex PC-only games like Mount and Blade 2: Bannerlords will work on this thing, thanks to its fully-remappable inputs and access to layouts created by savvy community members.
And herein lies the Steam Deck’s secret superpower. I’ve cleared so much of my backlog with this device, but I’ve also broadened my palette with so many cult classics that have never had the privilege of portability.
Reviving old games for a new age
I find nothing more annoying than when games are lost to time due to backward compatibility, licensing issues, awkward control schemes, or just plain old commercial unpopularity. The Steam Deck feels like a great equalizer in this regard — it will pretty much play anything that you throw at it, including a slate of underrated gems from my childhood.
2011’s The Lord of the Rings: War in the North is a game that nobody talks about, mainly because it came out in the same year as Dark Souls and Skyrim. But it’s also a fantastic third-person co-op action game with innovative RPG systems, a stellar voice-acting cast and a killer license. It feels like a continuation of the (fantastic) Lord of the Rings movie tie-in games from the early 2000s, and is a piece of history that led to Monolith’s Middle-Earth series. But history hasn’t been kind to it. War in the North was delisted on most digital storefronts and was never made backward compatible. Yet it runs like a dream on my Steam Deck.
The novelty of this process, and indeed, the quaintness of playing console-only games while on the move hasn’t worn off on me yet. My weekly rotation includes your typical favorites, but also games like Lost Planet, Max Payne 3, Gun, Kane and Lynch, Condemned: Criminal Origins, Killer7 and Project Snowblind
The Steam Deck is a goldmine if you feel nostalgic for the many many eras of experimental IPs. It has felt so refreshing to dig into this aspect of the library, given how safe and nostalgia-focused the industry can feel nowadays. One of my absolute favorite games of the 2010s was Digital Extreme’s The Darkness 2, a franchise that is now in (what looks like) perpetual stasis, for some reason.
Into the Darkness
A pretty relic of the past, I was so surprised to find that it runs perfectly on the Steam Deck in 2022, better than it ever did at launch. I was able to find a new appreciation for the aspects of the game that stuck with me when I was a teenager, like the game’s inimitable cel-shaded art style, evocative of the same graphic novels The Darkness 2 is based on.
“It took a lot of work to make a game where the scene lighting could be affected by the gameplay and, at the same time, affect the gameplay itself. This wasn’t easy to manage as each setting and gameplay scenario needed to work in light and shadow. Even now, if we can avoid it, we tend to avoid such systems in our games,” said Mat Tremblay, Art Director on The Darkness 2.
“There were other games at the time, like Borderlands, who were doing something similar, but I think we were successful in getting our game to stand out among the crowd. The subject matter, the graphic novel roots. We wanted to embrace that visual style as so many games at the time focused on desaturated realism”
There’s also the unique combat, which blends a first-person shooter with a hack ‘n’ slash, as you wield the proverbial darkness to slash and juggle mobsters, or pin them to the wall with lobbed metal poles. This ‘play with your food’ approach to battle has seen success in later games like Sony Santa Monica’s God Of War: Ragnarok.
“I mean, wielding those Demon Arms! It’s so visceral,” Tremblay said. “In the end, the game came together nicely, and it is great to see that it might see a resurgence on platforms like the Steam Deck … Too many great games are made and then forgotten as the shiny new game gets announced and released.”
What was it about this period that…
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