Game Review,  MaybeGames

Indigo Prophecy

Year: 2005
Developer: Quantic Dream
Genre: Interaktives Drama
Duration played: 15 hours


Wacky mystic thriller that gets too bonkers too soon

This is the game review. Here you can find the music review of
Indigo Prophecy.

My first contact with Indigo Prophecy (or Fahrenheit, as it is called in German) was with the demo that came with an issue of the Gamestar magazine - great, twice the nostalgia in one sentence! In the 10-minute sample, we play the beginning of the thriller and watch one of the protagonists, Lucas Kane, who stabs a man in the toilet of a typical American diner, controlled by strange forces. No sooner has the atrocity been committed than Lucas regains consciousness. His mood, one of the game's elements, understandably plummets, but that's the least of his problems. He has to get rid of the murder weapon, hide the body and find out who or what drove him to murder a complete stranger.

The atmosphere is dense and menacing, the characters act believably. Quantic Dream 's game remains pleasantly consistent: if we don't let Lucas wash the blood off his hands, he attracts attention when he leaves the restaurant. If he doesn't hide the murder weapon, it will be found more quickly by the detectives. And here comes the other story twist: in addition to Lucas, we also play two other protagonists, Carla Valenti and Tyler Miles from the homicide squad. So we embody the hunter and the hunted, although the game doesn't make it too easy for us. For example, the game cuts away when Lucas hides the knife so that we, as detectives, don't immediately know where to look.

Cliché? Okay!

The character design doesn't fall into the cliché box, but instead dives straight in head first. On the one hand, we have the ever-hip and reggae-listening Tyler, who plays basketball with paper waste in the police station and who radiates funk even when he walks - because he is black. Or Carla, the Italian detective who could have stepped straight out of an American crime series à la Law & Order . The familiar stereotypes also appear outside of the main characters: the brother, a devout pastor who looks at Luca's crime from a spiritual perspective, or the crotchety old woman who oracles our future as a blind medium. The dynamics among the characters, especially between the two detectives, are fun and one of the game's greatest assets, especially as the relationships are largely believably influenced by our decisions.

Unfortunately, that's where the positives end. Although the game keeps building up tension by having us make decisions under time pressure, this is unfortunately not enough to maintain the pace from the beginning. The flashback sequences in Luca's childhood in particular, combined with the mediocre gameplay, impede the flow of the story and the frequent quicktime events, which can quickly degenerate into trial-and-error, ensure that the pace of the narrative is also slowed down. Unfortunately, the other major point of criticism for me is the confusing story, which I will of course not spoil here. I have to say, however, that at a certain point, memories of the messed-up series Heroes come to mind, until the story finally shoots itself completely into absurdity with stupid twists and The Matrix-like tropes.

Summary

So let's just say: an exciting premise in which we play both the perpetrator and his pursuers. Check. A fast-paced story that starts strongly but quickly loses its drive. Check. And gameplay that works okay, but suffers from poor controls in many places. Unfortunately also check. What remains is a good approach with poor implementation. For me, it's a great appetizer for the other QuanticDream games, which I haven't been able to play yet due to console exclusivity - until now. Because they've now been released on PC too, which means I can finally catch up on them. And if they've addressed my criticisms of Indigo Prophecy then I'm looking forward to finally playing Heavy Rain, Beyond: Two Souls and Detroit: Become Human . You can find all the information about the soundtrack here: Music review Indigo Prophecy.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

en_USEnglish