48 Chambers

48 Chambers received a Second Chance with the Chick.  Click here to read it.  Consider the new review the definitive one.

48 Chambers is kind of fun.  It can also fuck off.  I don’t take telling stuff to fuck off lightly.  I reserve it for things that I might care about.  In the case of 48 Chambers, it has clean graphics and an interesting hook.  Think of it as a top down dexterity-tester, sort of like N or maybe a little like a previous game I reviewed here, Crazy Balloon Lite.  The idea is to navigate a ball past obstacles and to an exit before you run out of time.  If you pick up any dots along the way, they add to the timer.  Sometimes you have to first pick up keys that open doors.  All really straight-forward maze type of stuff.  But it can be fun.  I actually wish I could try it with an old-timey trackball like coin-ops had back in the day.  Apparently I could, if I bought the PC version.

But I didn’t buy the PC version.  I bought it on Xbox Live Indie Games.  And it can fuck off.  Not because of the controls, which surprisingly work well on a joystick.  When Brian and I previewed this for Indies in Due Time, my biggest fear was having loose control that would render the game unplayable.  Totally unfounded.  The controls actually lean towards the heavy side, and this works.  It makes it very unlikely that you’ll accidentally skid off into a spike.  It’s not a perfect solution to a mouse, or especially a trackball, but it does the trick.

No, the game can fuck off because it lacks two very key ingredients.  One, there’s no continues.  Once you game over, you get to start all over from level one.  I’m not a big fan of this concept for gaming.  Continuing is kind of a big deal to me, because I have an aversion towards playing things I’ve already done before.  I want to finish something and be done with it.  I don’t want to keep starting over from scratch.  48 Chambers is a game that relies somewhat heavily on trial-and-error, yet if I run out of lives twenty levels in, I have to play the previous 20 levels before I can continue to trial and error my way any further.  Fuck that.  It’s 2012.  The concept of being able to continue a game was kind of established around 1980.  I don’t see how it makes me a bitch to expect a gaming convention that has proven to be effective and valuable for over thirty fucking years.

But, I could have put up with that if 48 Chambers had online leaderboards.  Which it does.  If you have the PC version.  Which I don’t.  The excuse for the lack of one on XBLIG is the same old shit.  It’s not a real leaderboard, it’s a crappy peer-to-peer one, blah blah blah.  Who cares?  Ghettoized XBLIG leaderboards are better than none at all.  In some games, like for example the #1 game on this site, the presence of one can make the difference between being a leaderboard game and myself arranging a picket at the developer’s house.  With no continuing, the only reason I would have to press forward and continue playing the game is trying to land a spot on that board.  So 48 Chambers can go fuck off.  No continues.  No leaderboards.  It needed one or the other, and it has neither.  Why would I keep playing?  Pride?  Right, because being able to beat a video game that will have a user base somewhere south of the membership of the Mother Teresa Erotic Fan-Fiction group on Google will provide me with a real ego boost.

48 Chambers was developed by Discord Games

80 Microsoft Points would have rather had DLC for Take Arms in the making of this review.

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Indie game reviews and editorials.

8 Responses to 48 Chambers

  1. CJ says:

    Eh, I don’t care much for leaderboards. Especially since the entire purpose of one is completely destroyed when someone uploads the save file to their PC, has gameshark sex with it, then has the balls to actually upload it back to their 360. Data for 360 consoles are easily hackable.

    • Starglider says:

      This is why I use a layer of custom encryption on my save data. You’d have to decompile and reverse engineer the C# to hack it, and I don’t think crackers of that calibre mess about with XBLIGs.

      Anyway, I don’t know why (some) XBLIG devs do the no-continues thing either. On all major games ‘survival mode’ is a bonus extra-hard difficulty mode, because pretty much all game designers now admitt that the player should be allowed to choose how much repetition they want. I think making it mandatory is a symptom of the dev making a game for themselves rather than for the player.

      • Chounard says:

        Every single developer who tested/peer reviewed your game has a copy of the source code, just sitting around.

        The reason no one is bothering to corrupt your leaderboard is because no one is playing, not because it’s super difficult. If there were several hundred thousand on there, some asshat would cheat.

        I actually think all devs should stop including these poor substitutes leaderboards, and make huge stink about why it’s only available in the PC version. (Making a big stink is the only way anything has ever been obtained from Microsoft for XBLIG devs.)

        Kairi, I agree with you about the continue situation. That’s twice in one week. End of the world?

        • Starglider says:

          No, they have a copy of the object code. You can decompile that, but understanding complex algorithms in obfuscated .NET bytecode is really quite hard.

          I agree with the general point though, in that it’s pathetic that MS doesn’t allow leaderboards or achievements, but also blocks Internet access and prevents XBLIG devs from making their own versions (properly).

          • CJ says:

            You don’t have to mess around with the game’s source code to hack the leaderboards anyway, just mess with the save file on the PC. Not only that, distribution and code compatibility issues pretty much slap the face of any hardcore hacker who wants to share the pain online with the 360 using your game’s source, so you don’t have to worry about XBLIG mods running around.

            I’m just gonna make a HUGE data file though, to purposefully mess with the hackers. 🙂 Opening and browsing large files is easy on the 360, but on the PC it can be a HUGE pain the ass, depending on your operating system.

            In regards to the difficulty with no continues, I’m feeling the pain for anyone who has to master the game to complete it in one sitting. That’s a major fuck up for the developer. If a game’s gonna have 0 continues in any way, the game should be somewhat easy to complete.

            • Chounard says:

              Nobody was suggesting rebuilding the binary. The point was that the save file is encrypted. Looking at the decompiled source would have made reverse engineering that trivial. But since he’s using code obfuscation, it’s much more difficult. (Most people aren’t, though, since it doesn’t come built into VC# Express.)

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