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Space Siege

Because nature abhors a vacuum
There's nothing too deep or life-encompassing about Space Siege. It is, like its goblin-bound forebear, Dungeon Siege, basically about the hack and slash. This time, however, the slash is done with an arm-mounted laser-swordfork thing, and the hack is, well, more like a blast.

Grenades, electrical discharges, blazing autocannons: you're reaping revenge as a hi‑tech part-cyborg killer on a technology curve that would make the Terminator blush.

Yet there's still a story unravelling amid all this carnage: you're trapped aboard a besieged colony ship, miles across. Aliens are intent on wiping you out, and the collapsing ship is slowly turning into a haywire death-trap.

Can you save the pockets of humans who remain alive? Just how easy it is to fight your way out of this mess will depend on how much of your humanity you're willing to give up to cybernetic upgrades. The more machine you become, the less of a normal person you're going to be at the end of it all. The Darth Vader conundrum, if you will. All this tricky decision-making will factor into the story - something that Gas Powered are keen to stress will make this Diablo-gone-shooty game all the more playable a second time around.

But let's not loose sight of how immediate and easy to pick up Space Siege is intended to be. Within seconds of sitting down at the keyboard in Sega's Brentwood HQ I was locked into the game. I was frying crawling bug-creatures with my area-of-effect electric burst, gunning down towering alien warriors as they charged towards me, and skewering the ones that came in close with my laser-fist toy. At the click of a mouse and a couple of keys, I was sending barrels flying and filling the decks with fire. It's utterly accessible and remarkably fresh: those Gas Powered chaps sure do know their way around a videogame.

What's more, this is a game that is reworking the familiar in entertaining ways. The donkey sidekick in Dungeon Siege was one of our favourite characters in a game, and his role is partially reprised with the arrival of a lovely orange robot, who will accompany you. Like you, he's eminently upgradeable, and you'll be able to take tech that you've scavenged to either overhaul the robot, or build new variants if he gets destroyed in battle. The game gives you a hub base to return to after the fighting, so expect regular rest-stops to consider quite how you're going to spend your upgrades. Just how much cybernetic work do you want to do on your human hero? Hmm.

Space Siege hasn't managed to do much to actually surprise us, but even five months away from release it's solid, and totally playable. It's not overly demanding of your PC, either. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if this game finds itself onto half the laptops in the land. It's so familiar and welcoming that I could have sat there for hours if Sega hadn't sent me packing. For those of you wanting something that harkens back to the loot-wars of Diablo, but who don't want to play Titan Quest through again, this might well be the ideal game.

PC Gamer Magazine
// Interactive
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Read all 13 commentsPost a Comment
Sounds like I'm going to be getting it when its cheaper, a christmas deal is inevitable somewhere!
fleeties on 24 May '08
This message is not being displayed because the poster is banned.
humorguy on 24 May '08
If it's as fun as the other Siege games then i'll lap this up!
Sasquatch9999 on 24 May '08
Simple fare for lowly PC's. Sound's like they will have a hit with this. After all, complicated games needing high end PC's sure aren't selling at the moment! (Crysis anyone?!)

Crysis sold over a million copies a long time ago, which may be fairly underwhelming given the hype, but is hardly a commerical failure.
Mogs on 24 May '08
This message is not being displayed because the poster is banned.
humorguy on 24 May '08
Because they can make even more money by going multiplatform.
Mogs on 24 May '08
This message is not being displayed because the poster is banned.
humorguy on 24 May '08
They're not leaving the PC format.
Mogs on 25 May '08
Because they can make even more money by going multiplatform.

...And leaving the PC format by not losing money.

when was leaving the pc format decided?
ToonarmY on 25 May '08
It wasn't.
Mogs on 25 May '08
Looks like good fun mindless stuff.

When are Sega going to put back the 'Seeegggggaaaaa' bit back into the opening titles?
The Missing Link on 26 May '08
Yeah, I enjoyed the original Dungeon Siege games (although the goblins with miniguns were unforgivable).

Sometimes, you just want a fun game that requires no brainpower.
katarn on 29 May '08
Oooooh. Schoolboy error.

But let's not loose sight of how immediate and easy to pick up Space Siege is intended to be.

Not something you expect from a writer? Loose is a word that people use to describe your mother, right?

So, what was it? Ignorance of how to spell lose? Having too much faith in the spellchecker? Or the editor not checking your work thoroughly enough Laughing
Aircool_212 on 25 Jun '08
Read all 13 commentsPost a Comment
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