The Darkness
Embrace the shadows.
Dark Forces
At the outset, your powers are relatively limited. You can summon a Berserker minion, an unpleasant little chap who follows you around and attacks your foes (and, unfortunately, any innocent who walks into his path - he doesn't discriminate). As the game progresses, three other kinds of minion will become available to you, each with unique powers. You can also enter "Creeping Dark" mode, which allows you to control a single snake-like Darkness head, and slither along floors, walls and ceilings, chomping on the faces of enemies you meet and even interacting with objects like locked doors to clear a path for Jackie to follow.
Jackie's abilities gradually grow as you move through the game in a variety of ways. Consuming the hearts of your enemies by pressing a button while standing next to their corpse fully refills your Darkness gauge (measured cleverly by having glowing patches on the heads of your snake creatures, rather than with an ugly bar on-screen). It also increases a counter for Hearts Devoured (lovely!), which, at certain points, boosts your Darkness Level - essentially making your creatures more powerful and giving them the ability to last in lit areas for longer.
The second way to progress your abilities (not counting the obvious mechanism of picking up new weapons) is to kill and devour the hearts of "evil" people - mostly the crime bosses within Paulie's empire. These black hearts yield new powers for The Darkness - the first you pick up is a massively-strong pointed tentacle, which can be used to impale enemies, or even to lift objects like cars and fling them around. By the end of the game, you'll have acquired a number of other abilities, each of which offers new tactical opportunities in any given situation.
This is where the preview build of The Darkness we've been engrossed in for the last few days comes into its own. Each situation can be approached in a variety of different ways, thanks to the different abilities you command; exploiting the potential of the Creeping Dark mode to scout and decimate enemy forces while remaining safely hidden, for example, is a good tactic for many encounters. Others benefit from using the Dark Tentacle to create impromptu shields from garbage skips and cars, and sniping from cover, although we were disappointed to note that throwing cars at enemies doesn't actually hurt them. It merely impedes them.
Other situations call for a more head-on, ultra-violent approach. We were happy to oblige. One level later in the game, when the feud has escalated into all-out war, sees you storming a ship in New York harbour. Marching down the corridors of the ship, twin pistols in hand, smashing every light fitting along the way with a disdainful whip of the Dark Tentacle, hearing the panic erupting around us, was a wonderful moment of gaming. It's a moment when it felt like Starbreeze really wanted us to feel what it's like to be the terror at the heart of humanity's fear of the dark.
The Darkness is filled with such moments, but Starbreeze wants you to be afraid, as well as wanting you to feel like something to be afraid of. To this end, the game also focuses around a second plotline - Jackie's struggle with The Darkness itself. His powers are more a curse than a blessing, since they are granted by a tremendously old and evil creature (voiced with wonderful panache and a hefty dose of guttural madness by former Faith No More frontman Mike Patton) who is much more interested in controlling Jackie than in being controlled by him.
This leads to a number of the game's more memorable sequences, as Jackie battles through a nightmare world reminiscent of World War 1 - but with the trenches and pillboxes filled with the walking dead. German soldiers are hollow-eyed, skeletal zombies, while the British forces (who all have chipper English accents) are stitched Frankenstein-like horrors, their body parts torn apart and put back together far too many times by a malevolent force which won't let them die. Combined with an apocalyptic red sky and a landscape which features the warped and crucified forms of the Angels of Death, it's resolutely grim and disquieting, and spices up the narrative of the game beautifully.
Afraid of the Dark?
While the atmosphere of the game seems impeccable, some aspects remain somewhat rooted in the same design sensibilities we encountered in Chronicles of Riddick. The free-roaming New York environments feature a number of sub-quests, accessed simply by walking up to people and finding out what they need help with. These quests generally reward you with unlockable content (ranging from concept art to entire issues of The Darkness comic). However, they send you around districts which are generally empty of NPC characters, which miraculously repair themselves after firefights and which generally feel a bit more artificial and non-interactive than we've come to expect from next-gen entertainment.
Combined with the game's weak physics system, this can result in The Darkness feeling very much like last generation's gaming wrapped up in a beautiful shell of modern graphics, superb storytelling and great level design - in the version we've played, anyway. However, there's arguably more praise in there than criticism. The Darkness may offer little new or hugely ambitious in its gameplay, but those things which it does, it does better than almost any game of this type we've played. Writing, presentation, pacing, voice acting and minute-to-minute gameplay are all excellent, based on our experience so far. Much as we love innovation, we're perfectly happy to shelve that requirement for a labour of love that simply takes all the old tricks and does them better.
Graphically, it's worth noting, The Darkness is a high point - not as stylised as Gears of War, nor as overtly beautiful, but chock full of dramatic lighting, gorgeous visual effects and imaginative, varied characters and creatures. The presentation, too, rarely misses a beat from what we've seen. One fantastic touch is that every now and then, Jackie appears in a lovingly animated scene where he simply stands in a beam of light, in a darkened room, and addresses the player with his thoughts on the plot, or an anecdote from his life. It took us nearly four hours of play to realise that these well-scripted, engrossing interludes were hiding loading delays.
Of course, being a next-gen game, The Darkness wouldn't be complete without multiplayer. To that end, the game sports a comprehensive set of options for setting up various different types of game, including crowd pleasers like Deathmatch and CTF. We didn't get a chance to bring our preview code online, but we're definitely looking forward to seeing how Starbreeze has integrated Darkness powers into the online arena.
So, the vital question; should you be quivering in anticipation of The Darkness' launch at the end of this month? In simple terms, if you enjoyed Riddick, or if you have ever liked first-person shooters, or horror games, or both, then yes, The Darkness is a fascinating prospect. In even more simple terms, quickly popping this game onto the Xbox 360 debug unit to check that it worked turned into a lost weekend, a remorseful 4am bedtime, and watching the credit screen roll past at some ungodly hour on Sunday night. This, believe me, doesn't happen very often around here. Call it the lure of the Darkness.
The Darkness is due out on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 on 29th June.