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Darksiders Updated Hands-On

Related Platforms:
  • PS3
  • Xbox 360

We pick up a controller and see where this post-apocalyptic take on the Zelda formula is headed.

Imagine yourself as War, one of the four horsemen of the apocalypse. The world has come to a screeching and violent halt as the scattered remains of humanity amount to little more than dust and debris in the empty streets. You must be pretty proud of your handiwork, right? One problem: This isn't your apocalypse. Some unknown force has conspired to bring the world to an end, but you've taken the blame. Now you're an outcast seeking to find answers in the middle of a fight between angels and demons.

Of course, the apocalypse is hardly a new setting in the world of video games. The destruction and lawlessness that go along with the end of the world make it an appealing backdrop for many developers, but one thing that immediately sets Darksiders apart from its ilk is the eye-catching art design. The game's denizens of angels and demons are rendered in impressive detail thanks to the imagination of comic artist Joe Madureira, who occupies the role of creative director on Darksiders. It's a slick look that lends the world a style that feels both gothic and modern at once.

Our time with Darksiders was split between a guided demo courtesy of Vigil's David Adams and some hands-on time to call our own. What Vigil showed was an impressive collection of characters and battles intended to reveal some of the game's more attention-grabbing moments. Among some of the highlights were sequences like these: Seeing the stone facade of a giant building break free from the foundation to reveal itself as a towering golem of rubble; a fight against a demonic figure known as the Phantom General confined entirely within a blazing ring of fire; and a boss battle against a dragonlike monster that you finish only when you rip its wings off with your bare hands.

While there's plenty of killing to be done, Darksiders is very much an action-adventure game with a heavy focus on exploration and character progression. One of your biggest challenges in the story is that you've lost a great many powers, rendering you a shell of your former horseman self. Over the course of the game, you'll rectify this by picking up a number of weapons and abilities. You'll acquire the big ones as you unfold the story and complete various "dungeons" (a term used loosely by Vigil, considering the urban setting), but you can also deal with a merchant named Vulgrim, who's more than glad to sell you items and upgrades for the low, low price of captured souls. This currency is gained from just about everything you destroy in the game, from zombified humans wandering the streets to wooden desks in old office buildings, and serves as a sort of reward for taking your time within the game rather than jumping from one boss fight to the next.

Our hands-on time was more about learning the basics than executing those big, cinematic moments. War wakes up in a parking garage whose multistory structure offers a good opportunity to shake the dust off his acrobatic skills. You learn to leap across wide gaps, shimmy along ledges, dangle from ceiling pipes, and climb walls covered in the proper handholds. Soon, we were swarmed by zombies, whom we were only too eager to dispatch with a few swipes of War's giant sword. The controls did a fine job of balancing between melee and platforming, without requiring too much input in either area. You need do little more than hit jump and let War automatically grip the side of a wall when he falls short, and time the attack button to execute multistrike combos when faced with a number of enemies. The most challenging portion of our session came against a miniboss in the building above the garage, who was best taken care of by lifting up chair and tables and hurling them at him just before he came charging at us like a bull.

Vigil has described its goal for Darksiders as creating a mature Zelda game with a distinct style to call its own. The style is certainly there, and for the most part, it's obvious where the game draws its inspirations. It's a wide-open world that you can traverse at your own will, but certain areas are off limits until you learn a critical ability at the end of a story quest. That continual sense of progression, combined with a host of upgradable talents and weapons, means the team looks to be on the right path.

101 Comments

  • jcouce

    Posted Jan 4, 2010 8:47 am GMT

    this is a buy for me, hopefully it will be available tomorrow for pickup at the local store

  • Tanatos1488

    Posted Sep 8, 2009 11:36 pm GMT

    Looks nice, art design is awesome, hopefully it will future a full open-end world.

  • playstation_dad

    Posted Aug 6, 2009 4:02 am GMT

    im likeing the look of this, very much indeed........................

  • game-dna

    Posted Jul 15, 2009 2:22 am GMT

    looks like God of war meets Zelda!!!! could be a winner.

  • Hard_game_Fan

    Posted Jun 28, 2009 7:21 am GMT

    Cool game, nice idea horseriddin,nice fighting style similar to god of war

  • bjm1995

    Posted Jun 20, 2009 12:02 pm GMT

    Looks awesome.

  • Smoolander

    Posted Jun 16, 2009 4:43 am GMT

    Zelda.......looks like God of War me thinks. If it can be as good as those games then I'll be interested.

  • Spencer24892

    Posted May 30, 2009 7:32 pm GMT

    This game looks pretty awesome but the developers are setting themselves up for a letdown by saying this game is gonna be like zelda. They got a good game here, theres no need to ruin it with massive hype.

  • epilare

    Posted May 30, 2009 3:15 am GMT

    alright!!! i'm a hardcore zelda fan. finished it like a thousand times on Nintendo 64. i've been looking forward to a zelda looking game for ps3 all my ps3-life. this is going into my collection

  • CommonFable

    Posted May 28, 2009 3:41 pm GMT

    Shinkada, you gotta look at it not quite so literally. Im sure its not gonna be just like Zelda's gameplay, just has some elements from it.

  • Shinkada

    Posted May 28, 2009 9:13 am GMT

    First they claim it's meant to be God of War, now Zelda? Sure I'm all for the idea of a God of War with more item collection, but games that focus this broadly tend to fall short in critical areas.

    I'll try not to be too skeptical though. If this game can pull off Zelda's item collection with God of War's brutality and atmosphere and still maintain a deep combat system like God of War's without devolving into Zelda's 'press A to win' territory, it could actually be a freaking fantastic title.

  • NicoLikesSoda

    Posted May 27, 2009 6:52 pm GMT

    This game does look sweet but something about those big ol' legs and feet...the whole plot seems so cool though

  • NicoLikesSoda

    Posted May 27, 2009 6:49 pm GMT

    This game looks SICK

  • ChuckE_Cheese

    Posted May 27, 2009 3:59 pm GMT

    now this...this is my kind of game

  • hand4hire

    Posted May 26, 2009 7:55 pm GMT

    game looks sweet hope it delivers

  • enix165

    Posted May 25, 2009 11:57 am GMT

    Ooh, looks like fun. =D I thought it was gonna be some crappy standard-fare shoot-some-zombies-with-a-gun-because-it's-a-zombie-apocalypse thing that's been all to common recently, but this looks great. Digging that sword in the second pic. =D

  • dynomitemasta

    Posted May 25, 2009 5:34 am GMT

    Game looks great... that's a mighty big sword too. And please leave the Interviewer alone guys, your gonna give him a life long inferiority complex now. Be nice.

  • Sutton

    Posted May 25, 2009 4:28 am GMT

    Man, zigzag149, you're right. This guy is one of the worst interviewers I think I've ever seen. This game looks killer, though.

  • Damnation_6

    Posted May 24, 2009 11:50 am GMT

    ...I WANT this game badly xD

Game Info

  • Xbox 360 PS3 Release Info

    • Release Date: Jan 5, 2010
    • ESRB: M
      Titles rated M (Mature) have content that may be suitable for persons ages 17 and older.
  • PC Release Info

    • Release Date: Sep 23, 2010
    • ESRB: M
      Titles rated M (Mature) have content that may be suitable for persons ages 17 and older.

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