At a glance,
there are a lot of very familiar aspects to The Binding of Isaac. You may have
been drawn in by the original Zelda dungeon style, the RPG shooter mechanics or
an art style in the same vein as indie game hit Super Meat Boy. All of these
aspects have been combined by Edmund McMillen and Florian Himsl to create a highly
addictive experience.
The game is
set upon a simple, yet incredibly dark premise. You play as Isaac; a young boy stripped
of his possessions and forced to flee into the basement before his religious
nut mother sacrifices him to her god. As you can imagine, Isaac is pretty upset about these turn of
events and has no choice but to delve deeper into the ominous basement. Equipped with
nothing more than his own tears of sadness he must fend off the creatures that lurk
below and confront his Mom once and for all.
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Every room presents a different challenge. |
The gameplay
might initially appear similar to that of an original Zelda dungeon, the
twist is that every room is randomly generated and no single play through is
ever the same. Each room you enter will have a different assortment of enemies,
layout and potential loot drops. The RPG mechanics show themselves in the form
of power-up items Isaac can find during his exploration of a dungeon floor. The
effects of these items will stack and grant many different bonuses such as
stronger shots, increased health or companions to fight alongside you. There are a
ton of these items and you will come across completely different ones every
time you play; expect to have a very different beefed up Isaac by the end of each
playthrough. On top of these power-up items are pills and Tarot cards you can
use. These items present a roll of the dice as their effect can be either
positive or horribly negative. You may for example use a card and be
unexpectedly teleported right into the middle of a boss fight. Not the outcome
you were particular hoping for. To say any more about the specifics of the
power-ups and gameplay in general would spoil the surprise, you need to try
these out for yourself.
Don’t expect
the game to explain its mechanics any more than I have. It’s deliberately
ambiguous when it comes to telling you what items or enemies do; your first
experience with Isaac is trial by fire. This may infuriate some players and
their first point of call will be to consult a guide to find out exactly what
to pick up and what to leave. I would urge against doing this as it’s the
unknown and skin-of-your teeth risks that make the game so enthralling to play. Part of the challenge is its completely random
nature and having to think on your feet. You will have some immensely satisfying playthroughs
wherein all the random rooms, items and enemies go your way. Other times you
will have more challenging playthroughs where you can be doing well, only to
use an item that lowers your speed and health. What makes the gameplay great
and so addicting is that you are forced to learn hard lessons and overcome the
odds. Trust me, after using that Boss teleportation card you will not to do it
again in a hurry.
As you have probably
gathered, Isaac is a game you will be playing through multiple times. Make no
mistake; the difficulty can be brutal, but what did you expect from half of the
creative team behind Super Meat Boy?
Players are going to die repeatedly before beating the game the first time.
After that, even more times as they face increasingly harder versions of the
dungeons. As cliché as it sounds, the more you play you better you become. You
begin to feel like a dungeon crawling pro as you uncover the tricks required to
finding secret rooms and defeating enemies is specific ways.
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Awwwwww! |
Edmund McMillen
has designed a world for Isaac that is both cute and disgusting. Giant maggots with
smiley faces that initially look almost cuddly will charge at you with ferocious
jagged teeth and explode into a bloody mess. Other enemies are equally
disturbing with the likes of floating foetuses, slimy crawling brains and what
can only resemble walking vaginas which shoot streams of blood at you. It’s a
dark style, but it’s very cartoony and there is plenty of humour and retro
gaming references to be found here. The game compliments this with some stellar
sound design; creepy ambient music for each dungeon floor and adrenaline
pumping boss themes. Everything in The Binding of Isaac sounds wet and disgusting
in the best possible way.
For £3.99,
The Binding of Isaac undoubtedly provides value for money. I managed to sink 20
hours into dungeon crawling and there are still plenty of challenges, achievements
and items worth going for. For such a cheap price it’s hard to complain about
their only being one real game mode. It would have been nice to see features
such as leaderboards, expanded stats or even a speed run mode but this is
nitpicking and only a minor blemish on a product that provides perhaps the highest
replay value too price ratio this year.