Sebastian begins his journey preoccupied with a deranged murderer inside STEM, which is a meandering mystery punctuated by a weak boss fight (an easily dodged primary attack made this one genuinely boring) that made me miss the non-stop climactic encounters and big moments of the original. The Evil Within 2’s story travels an unusual road, as its first half is tonally very different from its second. This is still The Evil Within, and its world remains delightfully malleable and weird. This is still The Evil Within, though, and its world remains delightfully malleable and weird: mirrors take you to safehouses! Burning paintings make barbed wire disappear! A cat gives you green gel so you can upgrade your abilities! There’s a shooting range in the world through the mirror run by a nurse! The sense that the world could change the rules at any moment keeps things interesting, despite, or perhaps because of, its inherent ridiculousness. The awkward dialogue can occasionally lend a certain B-movie charm, but it feels like a missed opportunity to not let them have a little fun in such an eccentric setting. Aside from one interesting character you meet later on, they are merely serviceable archetypes there to push the plot forward (the psychologist’s running gag is that she is a psychologist). Pedestrian lines like “What the hell?” and “Ugh, who comes up with this stuff?” break the horror spell, and most of the time I just wanted him to shut up and let the creepy world around him speak for itself. Despite having gone through all this once before, he still regularly quips mundanities at the weirdness of it all. Sebastian himself, on the other hand, is somehow even more dull three years later. Like the original before it, The Evil Within 2 may not know how to deliver convincing dialogue or maintain a consistent tone, but it does know that the mark of pure survival horror is to leave you feeling like you only just survived, time after time after time.ĭeveloper Tango Gameworks has done a good job at a cleaner set-up this time around by sending protagonist Sebastian Castellanos to rescue his thought-dead daughter from The Evil Within’s version of the Matrix, called STEM - adding some vital emotional stakes that were lacking in the original. The Evil Within 2 is an ambitious, genuinely tense, and at times brutally difficult experience, but one that left me exhilarated. Thinking back on my 20 hours with it, I had. As I said, I like the game and I bet I'd like TEW2, but I won't give the devs a free pass for their work.After finishing The Evil Within 2 I was exhausted, like I’d been through an ordeal. Even more so that changing your settings to medium or high doesn't hcnage much at all.īoth games are built on a bad engine and have bad optimization. But getting 45 on average on the lowest settings/1080p on a 1060 is just laughable. I also saw high end machines trying to run this game and they also all had bad performance, though at least 60fps since a 1070/1080 has raw power to bring it to 60+. But literally every card (I have yet to see a benchmark with 90%+ average) no matter if it's a budget or high end card sits at around 70%, from the benchmarks I've seen. It's really just the mid-tier or cheap af rigs that choke on it. Well, for one thing if you have a decent rig even if your GPU isn't seeing "100% usage" you can still have fine performance. Again, how people can justify this nonsense is beyond me. Originally posted by nomorevideos:Oh, okay so we have bad CPU usage that then causes bad GPU usage.
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