Space Siege Review
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Space Siege takes place in the year 2202. Humans have finally figured out a way to explore the stars, but in the process they bumped into another civilization called the Kerak, and the Kerak responded how lots of alien civilizations react in science fiction stories -- they decided to obliterate the humans. Humanity got advance warning about this, and they prepared some colony ships to flee the solar system, but their preparations took too long, and the Kerak assault force showed up before the colony ships could escape.
You play as a soldier named Seth Walker in the game. Your character is fixed; you can't change his name, appearance, or gender, and there aren't any classes or races to choose from. You're stationed on the colony ship Armstrong, and your ship is one of the lucky ones. It survives the initial attack, but before it can get away, a Kerak assault pod attaches itself to it, and aliens start spilling inside. That leaves it up to you to clear the ship of their evil presence and presumably save humanity.
Space Siege is an action role-playing game with an emphasis on action. You only find a handful of weapons and cybernetic parts, and there aren't any other pieces of equipment. You don't gain any levels or experience points, but you sometimes find (upgrade materials,) which you can use to purchase upgrades or supplies (such as health packs and grenades), and you sometimes receive skill points for completing quests, which you can spend on the game's 29 skills. And the campaign is linear, with almost no meaningful dialogue or choices or story development (and the minimalist story, such as it is, ends up mostly being a rip-off from I, Robot, but I guess if it's okay for Mass Effect to (borrow) from Frederik Pohl, Space Siege can borrow from Isaac Asimov).
That is, Space Siege is all about killing robots and aliens. To do so, you left click to move your character and you right click to attack enemies. You get a hotkey bar for your skills (such as (shield,) which makes you invulnerable for five seconds), and there are a few other useful keys, such as H to use a health pack and E to evade damage, that make the control scheme about as streamlined as you could want. However, given the focus of the game, the interface isn't as helpful as it should be. For example, to evade you have to move the mouse cursor to the direction you want to evade in, which sounds fine except you also have use the cursor to target enemies. And so to evade you have to move the cursor away from an enemy, press E, then move the cursor back to the enemy, then right click to attack again, and then repeat. That's not exactly the most convenient system I've ever seen. Worse, you're not allowed to configure the controls, and the easiest keys to use, the WASD keys and the spacebar, aren't mapped to anything.
To help you in your battles, you get a robot named HR-V (sounds like (Harvey)) to assist you. But like most parts of the game, HR-V is just a shell of what he could be. HR-V gets one good moment in the campaign when he comes to your rescue, but otherwise he doesn't talk or even beep, he's not given any sort of personality, and he just ends up being a follower and an attack drone.
Similarly, character development isn't very interesting. The much publicized decision about whether you should keep your character human or allow him to become more of a machine doesn't come to anything, simply because the benefits are weighted way in favor of becoming a machine. For example, adding cybernetic parts to your character gives you bonuses; not adding them gives you nothing. And of the game's 29 skills, 14 of them require you to have cybernetic parts; only two of them require you to be 90% human, and you can't even learn both of them.
The only reason to stay human in the campaign is to make it more difficult, but that's a valid choice because the combat is largely easy. Plus, there are (aid stations) all over the place, and if you die you just get sent to the closest one, often without losing any of the damage you caused to your enemies (only certain boss fights make you start over). I played the campaign as a pure human character, and I only half developed HR-V so I could pick up his base weapon stats, and I still cruised through the battles, only having trouble in the final boss fight. My guess is that if you install the cybernetic parts and pick and choose the best skills, the campaign is a joke.
A long time ago, I reviewed an adventure (it was so long ago that I don't even remember the name), and all I liked about it was the animated butterflies. Well, I had a similar response to Space Siege. All over the Armstrong you find gas canisters, and if you shoot them then they go flying around before eventually exploding. That never got old for me, but the rest of the game is sort of a waste. Space Siege is at best comparable to $20 bargain bin action role-playing games. It's short and repetitive, it's so linear that there's almost no replay value, and the ending is sort of a sad joke (if you're feeling educational, look up (pyrrhic victory) in a dictionary). So don't go anywhere near this game unless its price drops way down, and probably not even then.