HEAD TRIP
Game Psychonauts 2
Developer Double Fine
Publisher Microsoft Game Studios
Format PC, PS4, Xbox One, Xbox Series X
Release 2021
The shock of the new is important to Tim Schafer. “The challenge when making a Psychonauts level is coming up with something that makes you feel like you haven’t seen it in a game before,” he says. In that regard, we’d say what we’ve played is a qualified success. It begins at a music festival called Feast For The Senses, and that’s a tacit promise on which Double Fine fully delivers. Via a kaleidoscopic transition, we’re transported to a woozy, substance-fuelled brainspace that makes us feel lightheaded. With a psychedelic rock-inspired soundtrack noodling away in the background and shrewd use of chromatic aberration giving the world’s angular lines and edges a fuzzy, soft-focus feel, it’s a trip in more ways than one. But though we might not have been here before, at the same time there’s an undercurrent of homecoming: a strange, comforting sensation that steadily washes over us. Now we feel transported in a different way, back in time to 15 years ago, and another game that took us to places where real-world rules no longer apply. Psychonauts 2 certainly does offer something new, but it also gives us something equally precious: more Psychonauts.
A degree of continuity is exactly what Tim Schafer and Double Fine are aiming for. Not least since the story begins pretty much where we left off – or exactly where it left off, if you played two-hour VR adventure , which itself ran on from the end of the first game. “It’s like the third day in this story,” Schafer says. As before, we’re controlling Raz, a former circus acrobat with psychic abilities who can astrally project himself into another person’s mental world. The level we play kicks off at Psychonauts headquarters, when Raz finds a brain in a jar abandoned in a storage room. “It’s been alone for 20 years, which has caused angry.
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