Thursday, May 28th 2020
Nightdive Studios Releases New System Shock Remake Demo
While expectations for the System Shock franchise may have cooled a little following last week's report that the much-awaited System Shock 3 had been dropped by its development team and rights sold to Chinese giant Tencent, all is not terrible in the land of Shodan. Nightdive Studios, the actual holders of the franchise development rights, have just dropped a demo for the game on both Steam and GOG - a show of faith on the developers' part regarding their work of love in rebuilding the original game from the ground up.
Alongside the demo (which weighs in at a mere 2.3 GB on GOG), Nightdive Studios has also released a 40 minute video showcasing gameplay on the rebooted game, including developer commentary. The developers also coordinated with Shacknews in order to release an in-depth interview regarding the development of the game and its original reception.
Sources:
via TechSpot, Shacknews, GOG
Alongside the demo (which weighs in at a mere 2.3 GB on GOG), Nightdive Studios has also released a 40 minute video showcasing gameplay on the rebooted game, including developer commentary. The developers also coordinated with Shacknews in order to release an in-depth interview regarding the development of the game and its original reception.
40 Comments on Nightdive Studios Releases New System Shock Remake Demo
The Enhanced Edition is better than this.
If so, it looks bloody awful and I certainly wouldn't buy it.
Or is it supposed to look like Minecraft? Serious question.
If this was my company/project I'd whip all developers for a week or two to make an impressive first build, to hype up people and generate good feedback. Maybe slap on some RTX to get NVIDIA PR machinery working for me (it's REALLY easy with UE4)
I thought it was an official, license-owning developer redoing SS2 in a new engine but trying to keep the maps and gameplay mechanics as faithful to the original as possible.
Remember the Tomb Raider DOX (Dagger of Xian) demo? He used the Unreal engine and even the early teasers looked way better than this. The demo itself was superb, so I don't understand why this demo has been released in such low quality, pixelated textures.
Of course, it's possible that it's a design decision and the devs want it to have a retro look. I've also made a similar comment on their YouTube channel in the hope of getting an answer to that.
It's no big deal, just a bit puzzling.