Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop
Tag:

Rain

Kathy Rain 2: Soothsayer review
Game Reviews

Kathy Rain 2: Soothsayer review

by admin May 29, 2025


Kathy Rain 2 review

One of the few indie adventures to feel like a proper Gabriel Knight successor, though you do need to finish Kathy Rain 1 to really appreciate it.

  • Developer: Clifftop Games
  • Publisher: Raw Fury
  • Release: May 20 2025
  • On: Windows
  • From: Steam
  • Price: £16.75/$19.99
  • Reviewed on: Intel Core-i9-10850K, 32GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060, Windows 11

Put me in the camp of point and click aficionados who fiercely believe that 1993’s Gabriel Knight: Sins Of The Fathers is one of the best adventure games to ever touch a PC. First in a trilogy of thriller mysteries, it featured writing that was a cut above Sierra On-Line’s usual fare, puzzles that veered on the side of sensible investigations rather than moon logic, and a glorious bastard of a Cajun protagonist.

The Kathy Rain series owes much to Gabriel Knight. Swap the ’90s-era New Orleans author for a ’90s-era biker chick/journalism student, replace the voodoo killings with a conspiracy involving the death of a grandparent, and you have the first Kathy Rain, which was released in 2016 and boasted the generic-but-still-memorable tagline: “A Detective is Born”. But despite receiving fair praise from John back in the day, Kathy’s first outing had a murky plot about cults, trauma, small town disappearances, and Elder Gods that was only made understandable via a spruced up Director’s Cut in 2021. Kathy Rain 2: Soothsayer, I’m happy to report, needs no such re-release, though anyone who hasn’t completed the first game is bound to still be a little confused.

Kathy and the city of Kassidy both feel decidedly Midwestern, which is a cool achievement given this game was developed in Sweden. | Image credit: Rock Paper Shotgun/Clifftop Games

The sequel begins with a recap of the Director’s Cut, formally canonising it as the definitive version of Kathy’s past adventure in Conwell Springs. Three years after that incident, Kathy is older, wiser, and living in the mean made-up city of Kassidy. She’s struggling to keep the lights on at her PI office, Rain Investigations, until her mentor lets her know that a $200,000 reward is out for information pertaining to a serial killer dubbed the “Soothsayer.” After deciding to hunt the killer, Kathy hooks up with her Christian roommate Eileen (the pair are a lovely odd couple) and learns that the Soothsayer is connected to the events of Conwell Springs.

Like the first game, expect Kathy Rain 2 to feature some surprisingly creepy moments, not to mention a chrome dome in a suit. (Why are us baldies always the baddies?) | Image credit: Rock Paper Shotgun/Clifftop Games

The plot is more confident in its presentation than Kathy Rain 1, which often seemed unsure of what to do with its supernatural elements, and took a nosedive into Twin Peaks territory in the eleventh hour after mostly playing it straight. Here, the David Lynch surrealism and dashes of Silent Hill horror are naturally woven into the narrative at the end of each in-game day, which typically conclude with Kathy experiencing vivid nightmares that feature the Crimson One, a burgundy-suited baldie who talks in riddles. These scenes are connective tissue that make the search for the Soothsayer more engaging and sidestep all of the “Huh, what’s going on?” questions that the first game presented.

The methods of your investigation resemble Gabriel Knight: Sins Of The Fathers, but with the minimal interface of a late ’90s LucasArts game – Full Throttle, for instance. (For those wondering if this is more Sierra or LucasArts when it comes to deaths, know that you can die, but doing so just fades the screen to white, sending you back to where you were.) The bulk of your activities are standard point and click stuff – chat with folks, pick up items, use items to solve puzzles to progress further. Whenever Kathy speaks to an NPC, the well-penned dialogue and wide breadth of topics are highly engaging, and there’s an elegant system in place where you can ask folks about stuff in your inventory and objects in the immediate environment, prompting a huge variety of answers.

I will now proceed to ask this lady everything she knows about serial killers and all other topics under the sun. | Image credit: Rock Paper Shotgun/Clifftop Games

Roundabout, overly-complicated puzzle sequences go hand-in-hand with the adventure genre, but most of Kathy’s challenges can be solved by clicking on the right hotspots or exhausting inventory combinations. There are a few sequences that veer towards filler (ie, handing an NPC the right series of tools to help them fix their car), but most are nicely inspired, like composing the correct haiku to impress the owner of a poetry club. There are two especially tricky (and very ’90s) puzzles that involve hacking a computer and deciphering pager codes, but they’re still easier than that moment in Sins Of The Fathers where Gabriel had to decipher voodoo-speak on the side of a tomb to find a secret cult hiding place in a bayou.

Haikus and hacking, my two fave hobbies. | Image credit: Rock Paper Shotgun/Clifftop Games

Your journey is illustrated by some of the best pixel art I’ve seen in a point and click game, and the lighting effects that drench Kathy when she walks under Kassidy’s neon signs make me feel like I’m living in a parallel timeline where Gabriel Knight continued to embrace 2D for subsequent mysteries instead of FMV and clunky early 3D. The voice acting gets the job done nicely (Kathy and Eileen’s actors from the first game make a welcome return), while Daniel Kobylarz’s score provides a semi-melodic, semi-atmospheric vibe that I can listen to while writing this review, which is much appreciated. Check out the OST on YouTube if you care – the main map theme that plays as Kathy’s riding through town on her hog really gets me going.

Driving through the city, the wind in my hair. | Image credit: Rock Paper Shotgun/Clifftop Games

All of these facets weave together to make Kathy Rain 2: Soothsayer one of the most engrossing adventures I’ve played in a long while. It’s heavily reliant on extending the narrative of its forebear, however, and like the Kathy Rain 1 Director’s Cut, many of its more interesting twists and turns exist to iron out the rough patches of plot from the first game. But sequels don’t necessarily need to be fully standalone experiences, and you can probably blast through both Kathy Rain 1 and 2 in the span of a long weekend. If that sounds favourable, give Kathy a go. A detective has indeed been born, and as a femme Gabriel Knight, she carries the torch of a niche genre in fine form.

This review is based on a review build of the game provided by the developer.

Disclosure: I tested a beta for Kathy Rain 2 at the start of 2025.



Source link

May 29, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Send kids to the past to save the world from a metallic rain hellscape in the captivating point-and-click Decade
Game Updates

Send kids to the past to save the world from a metallic rain hellscape in the captivating point-and-click Decade

by admin May 27, 2025



Earlier this week, one of my industry peers James Bentley (they’re over at that other site about PC games, GamerPCs I think it’s called) put out a video essay titled “I Can Guarantee You This Game is Going to be Underrated”. Trusting in James as a critic of varied and interesting taste, I clicked through and found that yeah, they’re right, it probably will be. However, I also get to write about indie PC games for a living, so I’d like to do my part in telling you about this strange, point-and-click/ visual novel called Decade.


I don’t think Decade is an easy, or perhaps comfortable game to describe, given its heavy themes. The game follows four children, specifically the four last children on the entire planet, the only survivors after metallic rain killing almost everyone else, the rest of them subsequently killing each other. Somehow these kids manage to get a time machine working, with three of them able to travel back 10 years to try and save the world.

Watch on YouTube


The thing is, time travel or not, aging comes for us all, and these children do in fact grow older across those 10 years. While in the past, they can “investigate documents, technologies, and artefacts to understand history”, all the while trying to make decisions that can lead you into several different futures. This, to put it plainly, is a concept that will likely continue to keep me up at night.


How much guilt should I feel for leading these children towards a future that might not even be liveable? Will I waste their years away in doing so? Do they get to have a future? These are questions I’m yet to answer myself through playing the game, but I’d like to, and it would be nice if you were interested in trying to do the same.


Developer Last Piscean worked on this solo after losing their job, and they still haven’t managed to find one, and with the game releasing today (with a discount that makes it the price of two cups of coffee on Steam), there’s no better time to check it out than now.



Source link

May 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (247)
  • Esports (189)
  • Game Reviews (181)
  • Game Updates (217)
  • GameFi Guides (249)
  • Gaming Gear (247)
  • NFT Gaming (237)
  • Product Reviews (252)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Recent Posts

  • Here’re this week’s free Epic Games Store games
  • Corporate crypto treasuries are surging despite mixed macro signals: report
  • Ripple CLO on New US Crypto Bill: ‘Big Step Forward’
  • Republican Operatives Want to Distance Themselves From Elon Musk’s DOGE
  • Judge, Ohtani both homer in first inning of Yankees-Dodgers

Recent Posts

  • Here’re this week’s free Epic Games Store games

    May 31, 2025
  • Corporate crypto treasuries are surging despite mixed macro signals: report

    May 31, 2025
  • Ripple CLO on New US Crypto Bill: ‘Big Step Forward’

    May 31, 2025
  • Republican Operatives Want to Distance Themselves From Elon Musk’s DOGE

    May 31, 2025
  • Judge, Ohtani both homer in first inning of Yankees-Dodgers

    May 31, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

About me

Welcome to Laughinghyena.io, your ultimate destination for the latest in blockchain gaming and gaming products. We’re passionate about the future of gaming, where decentralized technology empowers players to own, trade, and thrive in virtual worlds.

Recent Posts

  • Here’re this week’s free Epic Games Store games

    May 31, 2025
  • Corporate crypto treasuries are surging despite mixed macro signals: report

    May 31, 2025

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

@2025 laughinghyena- All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop

Shopping Cart

Close

No products in the cart.

Close