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Dead Space (PlayStation 3) artwork

Dead Space (PlayStation 3) review


"Isaac Clarke waits motionless, the heavy sound of his breathing mixing with the low hum of the USG Ishimura, the freighter he’s been commissioned to put back together after the ship suffered critical power and engine failure. The engineer feels a bead of sweat run slowly down his back, its progress hampered by the tightness of his space suit. He shifts his shoulders and looks closer at the strange apparatus in front of him. It’s a series of tubes, filled with some kind of clear solution and....."

Isaac Clarke waits motionless, the heavy sound of his breathing mixing with the low hum of the USG Ishimura, the freighter he’s been commissioned to put back together after the ship suffered critical power and engine failure. The engineer feels a bead of sweat run slowly down his back, its progress hampered by the tightness of his space suit. He shifts his shoulders and looks closer at the strange apparatus in front of him. It’s a series of tubes, filled with some kind of clear solution and... something else. A dark mass which Isaac can’t make out in the dim light. He leans in, his helmet almost touching the glass. Suddenly the mass moves. It rotates and stretches and Isaac feels his stomache lurch as he recognizes the shape. It’s a baby. Inside the tube it has been horribly twisted, its thin and stretched skin glowing a sickly green, its eyes dead and black yet moving to stare widely back at him.

Behind Isaac there is a sound of cracking glass and something wet hitting the floor. He spins and glares into the darkness. Was that the shadow of something skittering towards him, or a trick of his mind? He aims his gun, and waits...

Nearly a year has passed since I first played Dead Space and wrote a review on it. That review was filled with over-the-top praise punctuated with the occasional self-masturbatory attack on other Survival Horror games. I later removed the review, fearing that I may not have been looking at the game objectively. One thing in particular nagged at me: if this was truly the ultimate gaming experience that I’d described in my review, why hadn’t I gone back to play it once since first beating it? Why didn’t I feel an undeniable urge to start it all over again, as I’ve done with other games in my A-list, such as Longest Journey, Metal Gear Solid 3, and Deus Ex?

So I went back and played through Dead Space again. And I figured it out. Necromorphs are boring to fight. That’s what it all comes down to. Sure, the first time you spot one of the creepy buggers, you have no idea what you’re supposed to be doing. You’ll probably go for the headshot like you would in most shooters. And then you’ll shit yourself as the decapitated corpse keeps coming for you... faster, in fact. But soon enough you learn that you’re supposed to be aiming at the limbs of these things, and from then on the game turns into a repetitive blood bath. The point of having the players hit the limbs was to make the game more tense. It’s the big new feature that Dead Space tries to introduce to the Survival Horror world. After all, it’s pretty frightening to have to stand your ground and carefully aim at an approaching ghoul which has every intention of eviscerating you when it gets close enough... right?

Actually, it turns out it’s more frightening to be forced to run while the damn thing chases you. When confronted with the possibility of having to explore a dark room while some hideous creature breathes down your neck, the lesser of two evils is always evisceration. The point is, enemies are much more frightening while alive than when they’re dead, so your strategy upon entering any room will be to stand your ground and fire until every Necromorph in the area is a steaming pile of bloody limbs. Thus the game becomes a war of attrition which is highly reminiscent of Space Invaders. Can I blast enough of the baddies before they reach my position and I have to down some health packs? The answer is probably yes, considering that Isaac’s very first weapon, the Plasma Cutter, was designed for cutting through titanium steel and thus has a highly negative effect on human tissue, no matter how re-annimated it is. Myself, I had mastered the art of evisceration within a couple hours and after that nothing could get within a hundred yards of me without suddenly finding itself eligible for disability benefits. Knowing how little threat the Necromorphs posed to my mad skillz, I prepared to beat the rest of the game at a comfortable stride.

And then something happened. I was walking confidently down a dark hallway, my plasma cutter drawn and ready to blast any foe foolish enough to approach me. When the lights went out, I wasn’t frightened. I froze, and listened for the inevitable approach of the enemy. Above me, there was a loud clanging sound. I aimed upwards, watching for the vent crawler. Instead I saw a violently vibrating pipe, banging against the metal of the hallway’s roof. Where, then, was my quarry? A scream in the dark caused me to nearly piss myself. From behind Isaac the Necromorph came, jerking its hideous boney protrusions around it like scythes. Yelling profanities, I pushed Isaac forward, fleeing desperately from this vision of terror. I hit a wall, whipped around, and pulled the trigger again and again. All my training and experience was forgotten as I blindly fired into the shrieking mass in front of me, hoping beyond hope that it would drop before it sank its teeth into me. Yet, even over the sounds of my firing, I could hear a new sound behind me, a dull clanking and scraping that I was willing to bet was no broken pipe.

Here’s the thing. Despite its flaws, Dead Space is incredibly awesome, not for what it tries new and doesn’t quite get right, but for what it perfects, which is a classic tradition of cinematic horror.

When you first see a head sprout spidery legs and crawl away from its body in The Thing... this is the revulsion you’ll feel when you see a dead body of a passenger sprout boney scythes from its back and crawl towards you with an almost human sigh.

When captain Dallas, crawling through the vents in Alien, first realizes he’s become the prey instead of the hunter... this is the claustrophobia and paranoia you’ll feel when navigating the cramped hallways of the USG Ishimura.

When the demon lays in its bed in the Exorcist and we can hear its breathing, we know it’s waiting for us to come closer... this is the suspense you’ll experience every time you hear an engine start or a pipe leak water. You’ll be sure there’s something terrible just around the corner, waiting for you with a twisted grimace and spread arms.

This is Dead Space. Your heart will be racing from the moment you land on the Ishimura to the final scare before the credits roll. It’s got its share of problems, but it still gets it right in all the best places.



zippdementia's avatar
Featured community review by zippdementia (July 28, 2009)

Zipp has spent most of his life standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door. There is a small mailbox there. Sometimes he writes reviews and puts them in the mailbox.

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Sise-Neg posted April 12, 2012:

I really liked this review. It flowed logically from one point to the next and the beginning paragraphs had strong imagery. Additionally, you pretty much described my exact feelings about this game.

I mastered Dead Space and gave myself all sorts of challenges, eventually getting the one-gun trophy at the same time as Impossible mode, and even bought a lot of the DLC for new skins and weapons. Still, by the time I set down Dead Space and moved on to the next game, I never had the urge to play through it again except for when a friend was visiting and I felt like seeing one of them yell their pants off at the beginning chase to the elevator. I think the reason is exactly what you described - the enemies get boring to fight.

Though Dead Space did get a ton of things right, especially in regards to sound and lighting effects and running into random people who have gone insane. Still, there were some things I think that could have been improved in that area as well. For example, while the game is often dark there is only one section in the game where everything gets completely pitch black due to a power outage that gets fixed in a few seconds. That part was scary as f***! But no sections in the game afterward have you fighting in that entirely pitch black environment. Ultimately, however, Dead Space is still pretty awesome. The Regenerator scared the piss out of me, the whole beginning of the game was brilliant, and that ship that had the Twitcher enemies that were fast as hell and made those horrible sounds? So many classic areas.
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zippdementia posted April 12, 2012:

Definitely. I just finished playing Dead Space 2 and the mobile-phone Dead Space (inconveniently also called "Dead Space") and have been debating whether I'll review them and how to approach it. I've also been playing through Resident Evil 2 again, which I find got some things right in 199X that Dead Space failed to get right in 200X.

Like you, I love Dead Space. Like you, I wish there had been more adversity pit against the player. Like that dark room is the perfect example. They do it in Dead Space 2 a couple of times, even pushing it to the point where you hear shit moving around in the darkness. But then they turn on the lights before you actually have to fight.

And it's that phrase that does it for me: Have to Fight. I'm getting a little tired of the modern survival horror game, which puts you in a locked room and then tells you to clear it out before you can move on. That's been going on since at least Resident Evil 4 and it got worse with Dead Space 2 and Resident Evil 5. The best part in Dead Space 2 was at the very end of the game when you are being chased by a regenerator and stopping to fight the many necromorphs assailing you pretty much means either death or a colossal expenditure of ammo and health. So you just run. And it's terrifying when you are waiting for a door to open and can hear those snuffling moans coming from right behind you. Ugh. I don't even like thinking about it.

Amnesia got the whole survival horror concept right. In the perfect survival horror game, you shouldn't be able to fight back. Few games try to do this (and even fewer pull it off, Amnesia being the only one I can think of... maybe debatedly Alone in the Dark). Still, the best survival horrors made you choose between standing your ground and fighting and just running. The early Resident Evils, Fatal Frame (which I actually don't like due to its god-awful controls and poor placement of savespots), and the first couple Silent Hills pull this off nicely.

I don't really blame Resident Evil at this point. It's made such a strong transition into an action game that I don't even buy them expecting to get scared anymore. And the Resident Evil monsters stopped being scary years ago. Most of the bosses look like they can hardly balance, let alone chase you (the regenerators in Resident Evil 4 are a piss-your-pants exception).

But Dead Space has absolutely terrifying monsters. I don't like looking at them. They are truly freaky and the sounds they make get my heart racing. So that game has a responsibility to use them in the most frightening ways possible. I haven't seen them quite live up to that in Dead Space 2. I got anxious a lot in that game, but never really frightened.

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