Darkest Dungeon

Darkest Dungeon
Developer(s) Red Hook Studios
Publisher(s) Red Hook Studios
Director(s) Chris Bourassa
Producer(s) Tyler Sigman
Designer(s) Tyler Sigman
Programmer(s) Keir Miron
Pierre Tardif
Kelvin McDowell
Artist(s) Chris Bourassa
Brooks Gordon
Composer(s) Stuart Chatwood
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita
Release date(s)

Windows, OS X

  • WW January 19, 2016

PS4, Vita

  • Q2 2016

Linux

  • TBD
Genre(s) Role-playing video game, dungeon crawl, turn-based strategy, roguelike
Mode(s) Single-player

Darkest Dungeon is a roguelike dungeon crawling video game developed and published by indie game developer Red Hook Studios. The game, following an Early Access development period, was released on January 19, 2016, for Microsoft Windows and OS X, with a release for PlayStation 4, and PlayStation Vita consoles a few months later. A Linux release is also planned at a later date.[1]

Darkest Dungeon has the player manage a roster of heroes to explore dungeons below a gothic mansion the player has inherited. Played out in a mix of real-time movement and turn-based combat, a core feature of Darkest Dungeon is the stress level of each hero that increases with further exploration and combat; a character sustaining a high stress level may gain afflictions that will hamper, or possibly enhance, their performance as an explorer. This concept was drawn into the game by the developer based on film characters that suffer from the traumas of combat stress such as from Aliens or Band of Brothers.

The game received positive reviews from critics, garnering several award nominations, and went on to sell 650,000 copies.

Plot

At the outset of Darkest Dungeon, the player learns that they have inherited an estate from a relative who, while seeking fame and fortune by excavating the dungeons and catacombs beneath their manor, has unearthed portals to dark dimensions and released a number of horrific and evil creatures onto the world. Cowardly, the relative took his own life rather than deal with his mistake. As the current owner of the estate and the surrounding lands, the player must recruit a roster of adventurers and mount expeditions to cleanse the estate of its vile inhabitants.

As the player ventures into the manor, the dungeons below it, and the surrounding lands, they find their relative's memoirs telling of the terrible deeds he had done in pursuit of knowledge and power. Eventually, the player is able to send a party into the titular Darkest Dungeon, the source of the land's corruption, taking steps to reveal its ultimate form. Within the deepest chamber, the player encounters the disembodied spirit of their ancestor, who now remains as "an Avatar of the Crawling Chaos." After defeating the ancestor's apparition, the party battles the Heart of Darkness - revealed to be the progenitor of all life on the planet. The party manages to defeat its physical form at great cost, but the ancestor's spirit reveals to the player that this has only delayed its inevitable awakening and, by extension, the end of the world. The ancestor explains that this is merely part of an endless cycle in the player's lineage, and that the player will eventually meet the same fate as he, and their descendants onward. The ancestor then accentuates this cycle by repeating his first words from the start of the game: "Ruin has come to our family."

Gameplay

In-game screenshot of a typical battle scene. The character in the foreground in performing her combat animation against the enemy party on the right.

Darkest Dungeon is a role-playing game in which the player manages a roster of heroes and adventurers to explore these dungeons and fight the creatures within. Prior to entering a dungeon, the player can use facilities in a town near the mansion to dismiss or recruit more heroes, send heroes to perform various activities that will heal them, gain new combat or camping skills, reduce their stress, or remove any afflictions that they incurred while in a dungeon, and buy and sell equipment and supplies to outfit their heroes, using money and loot gained during dungeon runs. Many of these facilities can also be improved to add more benefits or options to the player. The player can recruit up to twenty-five heroes on their roster at any time; each hero belongs to one of fifteen character classes, and has their own statistics and skills that can be upgraded over time. If a hero dies while exploring a dungeon, that hero is lost for good.

Once the player has completed preparations, they select four of their heroes to go explore a dungeon. Access to most dungeons requires completing several previous dungeons and collecting specific types of loot, with such later dungeons being more difficult than the earlier ones. Dungeons are procedurally-generated in a roguelike manner, and presented as a series of interconnected rooms with hallways between each. The parties move between rooms in a real-time, side-scrolling view, with the potential to discover interesting objects to search or random combat encounters during this time. When the party reaches a room, they may be forced into combat, but once clear the room remains a safe zone allowing the player to apply healing and other remedies to the party. When combat occurs, it plays out in a turn-based manner, with each character having their own order based on initiative that changes each turn. Heroes can use attacks, magic, special skills, or items during their turn to defeat the other party. The order which the party moves through the passages and rooms is critical as it affects who may interact with various items, and the available actions that a character can do while in combat; for example, a swordsman in the back of the party cannot easily attack, while range-attack characters like archers and mages can. The positions of heroes can be changed around, but this can consume time or a combat turn. While each dungeon has a target goal, the player can opt to leave the dungeon at any time, retaining all loot collected but forgoing the larger reward for clearing out the dungeon.

A core element of Darkest Dungeon is its Affliction system, a concept of a hero's stress level or resolve. Though a hero will have little stress when they are hired, it will worsen from a number of factors encountered while in a dungeon, such as adventuring without food or light sources, seeing the death or wounding of a fellow party member in battle, or from blights cast on them by enemies. If the hero's high stress remains unchecked, they may develop afflictions that will interfere with the behavior of the character, such as being frightened and unable to fight directly. Less frequently, a stressed character may develop virtues that enhance their attributes, such as becoming more invigorated within battle. Some afflictions, left unchecked, may become permanent quirks that remain on the character. Other afflictions can be removed back in the village and by performing special activities, such as drinking at a bar or repenting at a church, that occupy the character's time, preventing them from being part of a dungeon party. Stress can be lowered while in a dungeon through camping offered at specific locations, or other restorative items, as well as when back in the nearby town. While camping, the characters will have another set of available skills that can be used to help relieve stress and help with other party members.

Development

Chris Bourassa and Tyler Sigman had become friends while working at Backbone Entertainment, and had talked about the idea of building a game together, but their commitments to other studios left them unable to do so. During 2012 and early 2013, they had developed a number of ideas for potential games to develop, from which the core aspects of Darkest Dungeon bore out.[2] In April 2013, they found they had the time to work on this project, and decided it was a "now or never" moment, forming British Columbia-based Red Hook Studios to develop the game.[3][2] By 2015, their team included six people in addition to three more supporting their sound, music, and narration for the game.

The core idea of the game was its Affliction system, in which the dungeon-crawling characters would gain stress and eventually afflictions as they explored.[3] Bourassa and Sigman noted that while they are fans of classic role-playing games such as Eye of the Beholder, The Bard's Tale, and Ultima Underworld, most of these games lacked the human element to the characters. They give an example of a character being down to their last hit point in battle and the player simply making decisions to win, the character reacting regardless of their low health.[3] They instead wanted to "toy with player agency", giving moments where the player is reminded they do not have full control of the actions of the adventurers in the party.[3] They also sought to alter how most loot systems in role-playing games work so that the player was not always focused on finding the best gear for the characters but instead working to support their characters.[3] Bourassa and Sigman were aware that these facets may turn players away from the game due to the difficulty and inability to have full control, but continued to stay true to their vision of the game.[4]

The Affliction system was inspired by psychologically traumatized heroes, both through historical events as well as works of fiction such as Hudson from Aliens and the soldiers from Band of Brothers who are transformed by the horrors of combat; Sigman pointed to the seventh episode of Band of Brothers where a soldier watches his friends die from a shell explosion, stares transfixed at the event, and then becomes unable to fight any more, as the feeling they wanted to capture.[5][6] Though they were also inspired by Lovecraftian horror, they did not want to use the concept of "insanity" that is common in that genre, and instead focused more on the nature of stress and how it affected the human psyche.[3] Because of the importance of the Affliction system to Darkest Dungeon, the developers spent significant time to make sure that the impact of stress and afflictions were emphasized dramatically in the game's presentation, using special graphics and sound cues to signal the onset of an affliction.[3] They also created a "bark system", dialog stated by a character reflecting their current stress, affliction, and other attributes as another means to humanize the characters and remind the player that they do not have full control of the characters.[3] Alongside the Affliction system, they developed the town facilities that are used to cure afflictions and reduce stress, using concepts they borrowed from tabletop games.[3] They also included Virtues, positive afflictions that can result from high stress situations, and a means of tracking the afflictions of a given character over time, so that in future stress situations the character will often become encumbered by the same afflication, developing a behavioral pattern that the player may be able to use to their benefit.[3]

A disembodied narrator, voiced by Wayne June, was also included to comment in a sardonic manner throughout the game, furthering the atmosphere they wanted.[4][7] Bourassa had listened to June's readings of various H.P. Lovecraft works prior to developing the game, which partially inspired Darkest Dungeon. When the two were preparing the game's first teaser trailing, they felt they needed a narrator and approached June for his work. Once the trailer was completed, they recognized that June's voice as narrator was a necessary element for the game.[2] Art assets were created by Bourassa; in addition to the Lovecraftian nature, he wanted to give the game the look of woodcut and illuminated manuscripts, and took inspiration from eastern European artists such as Albrecht Dürer.[2] He further modernized the look by using ideas from comic book artists including Mike Mignola, Alan Davis, Chris Bachalo, and Viktor Kalvachev.[2] The game uses a homebrewed, lightweight cross-platform game engine developed by programmer Kelvin McDowell.[2]

Release

Bourassa and Sigman used their personal savings to fund the creation of Red Hook Studios, and sought to gain a grant from the Canada Media Fund, but were rejected.[8] Having originally anticipated an eighteen-month development period, they sought a way to fund the extended development period.[2] They launched a Kickstarter campaign in April 2014 for funding; prior to starting the Kickstarter, they made sure they had prepared enough of a media interest, including a trailer for the game released in October 2013, to attract attention at the onset of the campaign.[2][9] Due to the early marketing, the funding goal of $75,000 was reached within the first two days of the campaign,[10] and completed with over $313,000 of funding from over 10,000 backers.[11][8]

Darkest Dungeon was released on Steam Early Access on January 30, 2015 for Early Access backers, and Steam Early Access on February 3, 2015 for the public.[12] They used feedback from the Early Access period, particularly through those that streamed their playthrough of the game, to help with playtesting and adjust the balance of the game, while also finding that their approach to gameplay and presentation was validated by positive reception from these streamers.[4] Sigman noted that developing in Early Access was comparable to "working while naked in a transparent cube suspended above Times Square", but felt their transparency with players made the final product much better.[2] Bourassa and Sigman noted that they had had some issues with user feedback during Early Access, specifically after they added two gameplay elements around July 2015: the addition of corpses which affected combat positioning issues, and the possibility of a stressed character suffering a heart attack and dying immediately. Some Early Access players were dissatisfied with these changes, feeling it put the player at far too much disadvantage to an already difficult game, and complained to the studio. Bourassa and Sigman had debated what to do with these two features and eventually opted to make them optional elements to gameplay. Though this change was generally met with approval, a number of these players remained bitter about the game throughout the rest of its development, and attempted to have the studio's and the game's reputation derided by Jim Sterling, who has frequently been critical of Steam and Early Access titles; Sterling instead found the game to enjoyable even with this change.[13] Bourassa and Sigman recognized they could have done a better job in the social media to placate the complaints early one, but still felt they chose the right path with retaining these features and sticking to their vision instead of trying to meet all expectations from Early Access players.[14]

Though Red Hook anticipated releasing the game in October 2015, a personal loss affected one of the team members, and the game was subsequently released on January 19, 2016 for personal computers.[15] A cross-buy version for the PlayStation 4 and PlayStation Vita were originally planned for release in the second quarter of 2016,[16] but was pushed back to Q3 2016 to improve playability with the Sony controllers as well as to prepare these versions to align with new features to be introduced in the personal computer versions prior to this release.[17]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
Metacritic84%[18]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Destructoid8/10[19]
Game Informer9.25/10[20]
IGN9.1/10[21]
PC Gamer (US)88/100[22]
Hardcore Gamer4/5[23]

The game received generally positive reviews on its full release in 2016, holding a score of 84% on Metacritic.[24][25][26][27] The Escapist awarded it a score of 4 out of five, saying "Darkest Dungeon will kill your party, drive you insane, and leave you a gibbering mess at the Sanitarium. Yet it's so compelling and rewarding at the same time, you won't be able to resist diving back in for one more quest."[28] IGN awarded it 9.1 out of 10, saying "Darkest Dungeon is a punishing and awesome game of tactics, management, and pushing your luck to the breaking point."[21] PC Gamer awarded it 88%, saying "A wonderfully executed, brilliantly stressful reinvention of party-based dungeon-crawling, Darkest Dungeon is great fun, even when it’s cruel."[22] Gamespot awarded it a score of 9 out of 10, saying "Darkest Dungeon plays the long game. It builds you up for a grand bout that will test everything you've learned, as well as your ability to plan several in-game weeks out."[29]

Red Hook Studios reported that a week after the game's 2016 release, over 650,000 copies of Darkest Dungeon had been sold, including those from Kickstarter backers and Early Access purchases.[8]

Darkest Dungeon was nominated for three 2016 Independent Games Festival awards: the Seumas McNally Grand Prize and for Excellence in Visual Art and Audio.[30]

References

  1. "Linux :: Darkest Dungeons General Discussion". Steam.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Graft, Kris (February 8, 2016). "Road to the IGF: Red Hook Studios' Darkest Dungeon". Gamasutra. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Sigman, Tyler; Bourass, Chris (2015-05-28). "Game Design Deep Dive: Darkest Dungeon's Affliction System". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  4. 1 2 3 Cameron, Phill (February 24, 2015). "Darkest Dungeon: Designing for despair, and kicking you when you're down". Gamasutra. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  5. Lahti, Evan (March 17, 2016). "How Darkest Dungeon got inspiration from Band of Brothers and Aliens". PC Gamer. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  6. "Tyler Sigman Discusses Darkest Dungeon - YouTube". youtube.com. Retrieved 2014-02-21.
  7. Zucosky, Andrew (January 22, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon Review: Delightful Terror". Shacknews. Retrieved January 24, 2016.
  8. 1 2 3 McCutcheon, Andrew Glen (January 26, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon developers find success in B.C.’s growing gaming industry". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved January 28, 2016.
  9. Sigman, Tyler (2014-03-05). "A Darkest Dungeon Kickstarter Post-Mortem (Part 1)". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  10. "Darkest Dungeon by Red Hook Studios by Tyler Sigman :: Kicktraq". kicktraq.com. Retrieved 2014-02-21.
  11. Sigman, Tyler (2014-07-18). "A Darkest Dungeon Kickstarter Post-Mortem (Part 2)". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  12. "Darkest Dungeon Kickstarter Update".
  13. Sterling, Jim (2015-08-19). "Darkest Dungeon And The Perils Of Early Access". The Jimquisition. Archived from the original on 2015-08-15. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
  14. Grayson, Nathan (2016-03-23). "Darkest Dungeon's Harrowing Journey Through Steam Early Access". Kotaku. Retrieved 2016-03-24.
  15. Purchase, Robert (2015-10-15). "The marvellously malicious Darkest Dungeon gets a release date". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  16. Purchase, Robert (2015-11-18). "Oh no! Darkest Dungeon coming to PS4 and Vita in spring". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2015-11-18.
  17. Carpenter, Nicole (April 26, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon Delayed on Sony Platforms". IGN. Retrieved April 26, 2016.
  18. "Darkest Dungeon (pc)". MetaCritic. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  19. Rowen, Nic (January 27, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon Review". Destructoid. Retrieved January 27, 2015.
  20. Tack, Daniel (January 18, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon". Game Informer. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  21. 1 2 Stapleton, Dan (January 26, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon Review". IGN. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  22. 1 2 Birnbaum, Ian (January 25, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon Review". PC Gamer. Retrieved January 25, 2016.
  23. Steighner, Mark (18 January 2016). "Review: Darkest Dungeon". Hardcore Gamer. Retrieved 2016-01-24.
  24. Bailey, Kat (January 20, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon PC Review: Circle in the Dark". US Gamer. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  25. Muncy, Jake (January 22, 2016). "Playing Darkest Dungeon Makes You a Middle Manager, Not a Hero". Wired. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  26. Jenkins, David (January 21, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon review – stressed to hell". Metro. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  27. Toal, Drew (February 2, 2016). "Darkest Dungeon considers the psychological toll of adventuring". A.V. Club. Retrieved February 2, 2016.
  28. Escapistmagazine.com
  29. GameSpot
  30. Nunneley, Stephany (2016-01-06). "Her Story, Undertale, Darkest Dungeon receive multiple 2016 IGF Award nominations". VG247. Retrieved 2016-01-06.

External links

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