![]() ![]() The Last Guardian, though it’s a game about hanging out with a cool giant creature and includes a few action set pieces, only ever asks you to find the right way out of various rooms and spaces.Īfter waking up in a strange cave with Trico and slowly befriending him, the boy’s goal, and The Last Guardian’s only real plot, is that the boy wants to “escape” the ruins of a giant city. And though both those games have an action bent, analyzed closely, they’re really environmental puzzle titles - games in which figuring out how to get out of a room or to traverse a space is the point. Like its previous efforts, Shadow of the Colossus and Ico, it is a minimalistic narrative set in vast, ruined locations, filled with strange creatures and nefarious, nebulous forces. The team behind The Last Guardian makes a very specific kind of game. Unfortunately for players, we’re caught in there with him. Trico is probably among the best-realized computer simulations of an animal ever created, and in The Last Guardian’s game world, he’s a lab rat caught in a maze. Brute-forcing your way through a puzzle with a slow-to-respond animal who isn’t much help - well, it’ll get your blood pressure up. “brute-forcing,” is not a particularly enjoyable way to solve a puzzle under the best of circumstances. The process of solving them often comes down to trial and error - giving your big animal friend commands and hoping they’re the right ones. ![]() The Last Guardian is a long, expansive series of puzzles, most of which offer little in the way of guidance as to how they should be approached or solved. The only thing that’s more irritating than trying to get an animal to listen to you when they don’t understand what you’re saying, is trying to get an animal to listen to you while you’re trying to solve puzzles. Trico is very nice to hang out with, but he can get confused sometimes and that makes spending time with him very frustrating. The entire game is predicated on the relationship between an unnamed boy, whom the player controls, and Trico, an AI-controlled giant mythological bird-lion-dog creature. The Last Guardian very accurately simulates the experience of having a dog without much training. He probably needed training, but he never really got any. When we scolded him for doing something wrong, he would just get more confused, which, in turn made us more frustrated. When we said “sit,” he’d immediately run off and chase a squirrel. He was a good dog, but got confused easily, and that made people frustrated with him. When I was a kid, I had a dog that wasn’t particularly smart. Unclear design make puzzles hard to solveĬharacter animations can get in the way of playing the game Trico AI gets in the way of solving puzzles
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