Gundemonium Recollection – I'm Not Doctor Who https://imnotdoctorwho.moegamer.net One existential crisis at a time Mon, 05 Dec 2011 01:29:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 237362437 #oneaday Day 685: I’m In Hell https://imnotdoctorwho.moegamer.net/2011/12/05/oneaday-day-685-im-in-hell/ https://imnotdoctorwho.moegamer.net/2011/12/05/oneaday-day-685-im-in-hell/#comments Mon, 05 Dec 2011 01:29:27 +0000 http://angryjedi.wordpress.com/?p=3157 Continue reading #oneaday Day 685: I’m In Hell ]]> Bullet hell, that is.

Despite not being very good at them, bullet hell shooters are rapidly becoming one of my favourite genres to unwind with. Actually, “unwind” might not be quite the right word, given the sense of tension they tend to provoke, but… oh, I don’t know. They’re fun, all right?

Most recently, I’ve been playing Gundemonium Recollection, which is available on PSN and Steam. It’s cheap, too — at about £8 for it and two other excellent shmups, it’s certainly one of the more low-cost entries in the genre out there. Hell, even Cave’s iPhone games cost more than that.

Not only does Gundemonium Recollection have a fabulous title, it also exemplifies many of the things that I — as a relative newcomer — believe are “typical” for the genre. We have a cute, big-eyed anime art style. We have lots and lots of bullets. We have game mechanics that go a little beyond “move” and “shoot” but not by much. And we have beautifully, wonderfully cheesy music.

The whole aesthetic is one of the things I find most endearing about the whole thing. Speak to your stereotypical dudebro about what constitutes a “hardcore” game and, depending on how into their games they are, you’ll get all manner of different answers. They will likely involve either first person shooters or MOBA games, however, and almost certainly will feature the colour brown prominently. What they likely won’t feature is 18th century anime girls with Old West-style revolvers flying through the sky and shooting down everything from things that look like Angry Birds to scantily-clad women with massive knockers sitting astride gigantic rocket launchers.

And yet, from experience, I know what the more hardcore game is.

You can get good at, say, Call of Duty or Halo relatively quickly, and certainly be able to beat the games on their Normal difficulties without too much, well, difficulty. They’re friendly to short, quick-fire play sessions in multiplayer, and even the single player campaigns tend to be split into bite-size, episodic chunks, with you running from one setpiece to the next — in Call of Duty‘s case, perpetually following along behind an NPC who gets to have all the fun while you watch — towards an eventual, inevitable conclusion.

Gundemonium Recollection, meanwhile, is hard with a capital ARRRRRRGH. While the whole game is no more than about 15-20 minutes in length, as is typical for the genre, reaching the end of the game is a significant feat, particularly as you’re encouraged to attempt it without continuing. And once you do manage to make it through to the end, you then have your score to consider. How can you pump it up? How can you maximise your scoring potential in each stage?

Bullet hell shooters are less mindless than their name suggests. The stereotypical “shmup” involves dodging up and down while hurling increasingly-ridiculous weaponry at incoming enemies. And yet in bullet hell shooters, the actual “shooting” side of things is the least important factor. The skill you have to practice is dodging all those bullets — no easy task, but successfully pulling it off makes you feel like a badass.

In fact, achieving anything in the game, whether it’s progressing twenty seconds further than you did previously or beating your high score, makes you feel like a badass. There is, in fact, quite a comic juxtaposition between how badass you feel having achieved something in the game and the incredibly cute anime art style and music.

Such is the way of Japanese games, though. The culture of “gamer” (whatever that actually means) is significantly different over there, meaning we get little gems such as Gundemonium Recollection and its two sequels springing up out of nowhere and providing something infinitely more fun that Brown Shooty War-Bang Soldier of Duty XIV.

Assuming you don’t mind failing. A lot. Perhaps that’s the key difference. In a title like Gundemonium Recollection, you can fail. You can fail embarrassingly quickly if you suck as much as I do. Conversely, to go back to our earlier examples of supposedly “hardcore” Western games, there’s little to no consequence for failure. Die in a single player Call of Duty level and you just restart from your last checkpoint. Lose a multiplayer match and you can just try again — it doesn’t matter at all, because you still got XP and a little closer to the next batch of unlocks.

In practice, you’re actually achieving much the same kind of thing in Gundemonium Recollection, only the progress you’ve made isn’t necessarily reflected with perpetually-filling progress bars and unlocks. Rather, you’re making progress with your own skills, improving your own abilities at playing the game, and as a natural extension of that, you’ll be able to get further, score better, or take on the more frightening difficulty levels. (I haven’t graduated off “Novice” yet, and still felt like a badass when I finally took down the final boss.)

So, then, the next time you describe yourself as a “hardcore gamer” to someone, just consider that somewhere out there there’s someone playing a game about flying magical girls with revolvers who is infinitely more hardcore than you could ever hope to be.

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