hello void

Hello Void #2: The Case for Linearity and Playdead’s INSIDE, Newsletter Hiatus, and demo recommendations by Matthew Marchitto

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When I started writing this there was a big stuck boat, and because I move at a snail’s pace, the big stuck boat is no longer stuck. Now it’s just a big boat that was stuck. But at least the big stuck boat before it was a big not-stuck boat brought us all together to commiserate over the absurd simplicity of a big boat being stuck.

Anyway, hello friends and welcome to issue #2 of Hello Void. This one is structured a bit different, instead of having one big segment and a couple smaller ones, this is comprised of a variety of shorter segments.

Contents:

  • The Case for Linearity and Playdead’s INSIDE

  • Interlude

  • On Newsletters and Moving On

  • Read Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark

  • Play More Demos: Lunark and The Last Spell

  • Signing Off


The Case for Linearity and Playdead’s INSIDE

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I’ve always liked linear games. I want to be swept up on an adventure that’ll show me all the sights, to know that the experience from point A to point B has been fine tuned. Linearity isn’t a bad thing, but when I see it come up in conversation, it’s often with a negative connotation.

Linearity can create powerful and evocation experiences, all centered around the idea of knowing exactly where the player will be and limiting the scope with which they can react. And Playdead’s INSIDE is the perfect example of this.

In Playdead’s INSIDE the game slows the player down when it needs them to slow down, or speeds them up when it needs them to speed up. At no point during this does it feel like control is being removed from the player. Each nail-biting jump is manufactured, a pre-designed outcome that feels to players like an organic result of their input.

Simplicity is used as a mechanism to limit the scope of a player’s reaction. You can jump, move left and right, and interact with objects. That’s it. So when a monster starts chasing you, you can only go left or right, and the game knows it. This is how it limits the scope of players’ reactions, and because of these limits the game can squeeze the margin for error tighter and tighter but with precision. At no point does it feel unfair, or like you’re under leveled, or wandered into the wrong area. More often than not, you’ll make the jump on your first try. But it’ll feel like you almost didn’t. And that’s the point.

For now, we’re just talking about running and jumping, but you can apply the benefits of knowing when and where a player will be to a whole host of scenarios. From combat to narrative sequences, even upgrades and levelling up.

I’m not sure how this could be recreated in non-linear games. Looking at open world games as an example, their popular for their sandbox nature, but can also devolve in to meandering collectathons and repetitive tasks. The only way to recreate that sense of precision is to plug the player into isolated locations that can then impose linearity on their progression. But leaning too heavily on these dungeon-like levels can make the sandbox feel redundant, like it’s really just a hub world to traverse on your way to the next mission.

It’s why I enjoy linear games so much. There’s no meandering, no wayward wandering. The experience is focused and fine tuned. I like to be led along, and to know the sights will be exactly where they need to be.


Interlude

Violet Orlandi is a musician whose been making covers on YouTube for years now. She’s overall awesome and gives all her covers a dark, horror tinge. A little while ago she released her first original song, “Creatures,” with her band She Won’t Live.

I absolutely love this song, and have been listening to it on repeat nonstop.


On Newsletters and Moving On

It recently came to light that Substack has been engaging in scummy business practices via their Pro program. You can read more about the situation here and here.

So, this is going to be the last issue of Hello Void sent out via Substack. For me, it’s ultimately not a big deal. I have a small handful of subscribers and no paid subs. But I 100% understand why others who have improved their circumstances and rely on paid subs for their livelihoods would be hesitant to make the jump.

Where will Hello Void go? I’m not sure. I’m leaning toward Revue, it’s the most convenient and easy to use option for me, but there are a few hurdles to getting it setup. For the time being Hello Void will live on my blog, and I’ll continue to post issues there during this interstitial phase. (Does this mean it’s not even a newsletter anymore? An e-zine? Just weirdly formatted blog posts? Who knows.) Hello Void will likely be in limbo as I figure things out, but the (admittedly small) archive can be found at matthewmarchitto.com/hello-void

I hope you’ll still pop by to see what’s up! Until then, keep an eye on your inboxes for Hello Void’s return 👀


Read Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark

I adore Ring Shout. This is a must read, it’s equal parts horror and hope. Filled with surprises, evocative imagery, and unflinching truth. I highly, highly recommend checking it out.

Bookshop / Barnes and Noble / Amazon / Goodreads


Play More Demos: Lunark and The Last Spell

Do you remember demo disks? I had this one filled with tiles, each tile a demo for a different game. I’m ashamed to admit I can’t remember what all the games were, but I do remember one of the secret games. Another kid in my elementary school had the same demo disk, and he told me that if you put in a special input, you could get the tiles to flip. Supposedly, there was a secret demo hidden behind them.

So I ran home and tried it. Lo and behold, he was right! That’s why out of all the demos on that disk, I can only vividly remember one, Fighting Force. It was like I’d just unlocked a hidden treasure. I replayed that demo constantly, cherishing it, my own clandestine polygons that only a few (probably lots of) people knew about. Looking back, it’s a unique experience from a time when cheat codes weren’t readily available and games were filled with little easter eggs that weren’t easily discoverable.

All this to say, I like demos. I wish they were commonplace these days. They’re a great way to let players try a game out first, and with some clever design can also be used to hook players, almost like the opening line of a novel.

As such, I’d like to highlight a couple demos for games I’m excited about. Check them out, download the demos, and let me know what you think.

Lunark

I backed Lunark’s Kickstarter, and have been eagerly awaiting its release ever since. Now there’s a demo you can download via Steam to give the game a try for yourself.

Lunark is a sidescroller adventure game in the vein of Out of this World. The combat is slower with a precise methodical feel to it. But once you get the hang of it, navigating the world and dodging enemies becomes extremely satisfying. Lunark is set in a beautiful sci-fi world that is filled with vibrant colours, accompanied by awesome music, and brought together with meticulous rotoscoped animations. I definitely think this is a game to keep your eye on.

The Last Spell

The moment you load up The Last Spell, it hits you with the tone of the game. A sea of zombies all looking to a singular figure brandishing a staff aloft, a town on fire, and heavy metal playing in the background.

The Last Spell is a turn-based tactics rogue-lite. You have a limited amount of days to build defences, upgrade your heroes (assuming they stay alive), and fight oncoming waves of a zombie horde. Your goal is to protect the mages in the center of the village trying to cast the last spell that will banish all the undead.

Each day plays out in three phases. Phase one is where you upgrade buildings which provide a variety of benefits. Phase two is when you build defences, walls, barricades, and so on. And the final phase is nightfall, this is when the zombie horde swarms your town.

Combat plays out on a grid, alternating between the heroes’ turn and the zombie horde’s turn. There’s a plethora of abilities for your heroes to use, and many of them are AOE based, emphasising mass horde squelching efficiency.

The Last Spell is in early access, and the demo is the alpha version of the game. As such, it’s missing some features, particularly the meta progression which will let you carry over resource into a new run. It also throws you right into the action with very little explanation of what all the stats and abilities do. But still, it’s an absolutely fun experience and made me excited to see where the devs take the game. You can download the alpha demo now via steam.


Signing Off

Thus concludes Hello Void issue 2. I think I prefer these shorter segments, its easier for me to put together and offers more variety. But let me know what you think, do you prefer longer single topic issues or this mixed bag of subjects?

If you’d like to find me around the web, you can visit my Twitter, or check out my website, matthewmarchitto.com, where you’ll find links to all my work and more.

Thanks for reading!


Banner Photo by Patrick Carr on Unsplash

Hello Void #1: Rise of the Argonauts and Lost Potential by Matthew Marchitto

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Hello friends, and welcome to my renamed newsletter, Hello Void! Aptly named to encompass its miscellaneous nature, and the fact that I’m basically talking to myself. Hello Void will go out once a month (give or take) and encompass a variety of topics, but will have a notable focus on video games.

I plan for each issue to be separated into a handful of segments. The first will be what I think of as the main feature, this will be the longest and meatiest part of the newsletter. Followed by an interlude where I share a piece of media, new or old. And then finishing off with one or two shorter segments.

Today’s issue consists of three segments. The main feature is Rise of the Argonauts and Lost Potential, followed by a musical interlude, and finishing with What am I working on?


Rise of the Argonauts and Lost Potential

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I’ve always had an affinity for peculiar games that folks seem to have forgotten. Whether due to questionable quality or because they just didn’t hit the right cultural notes to become part of our modern lexicon. If you’ve followed me on twitter for awhile, you might have seen me bring up Dragon Valor for PS1. It’s always been one of those games that I have deeply fond memories of, but is also, by all metrics, mediocre. Whenever I bring it up, I seem to be the only one who’s ever heard of it. And everybody looks at me weird when I show them the totally rad intro for disc one.

Though well reviewed when they released, Maximo: Ghosts to Glory and Rygar: The Legendary Adventure both occupy that same realm. Games that nobody seems to have heard off outside of a few dedicated audiences. And both were games I remember playing over and over, absolutely loving.

I love these oddball games, peculiar and off the beaten path. Made with passion but oft forgotten. So, when I saw Rise of the Argonauts sitting in my Steam library, I decided to give it a try. I played it when it first released, and have mixed memories of the experience. But maybe, after a second look, RotA might turn out to be one of those hidden gems. Oft forgotten.

SPOILER WARNING: From here onward are SPOILERS FOR THE WHOLE GAME. You have been warned.

The Setup

We start out in the palace of our main character, Jason king of Iolcus. Jason is getting married to Alceme in a juddering, poorly compressed cutscene filled with jaggies that aren’t present in-game. It’s not a great introduction, and doesn’t help that stilted, wooden character models mime going through a wedding ritual. But assassins have infiltrated the palace, and before Alceme even gets to utter her first line of dialogue, she’s shot with an arrow through the heart.

We learn that the assassins are Blacktongues, a murderous cult devoted to Hecate. Later it’s revealed that Alceme was part of some poorly explained prophecy dictating that she would be the downfall of the Blacktongues, which is why they attacked her. It’s not really made clear what exactly that prophecy was, but it’s implied to be self-fulfilling on the part of the Blacktongues, since in killing Alceme they start Jason on his quest that ultimately results in their own destruction.

So Alceme dies, and Jason pledges to bring her back to life. With the help of the gods, he sets out on a quest to get the Golden Fleece, which has the power to revive her.

Right off the bat, this smacks of reducing Alceme to a prop to fuel Jason’s motivations. Though her death and revival is the anchor that tethers the narrative, we never get any insight into her character. The closest we get are a few flashbacks that show snippets of her and Jason’s budding relationship through the years, which is nice, but even these are optional. I only found them because I like to explore the nooks and crannies of levels, otherwise it’s extremely easy to miss these extra scenes.

Stab, talk, and stab again

Rise of the Argonauts is an action RPG. The combat plays like a hack n’ slash, you have two attack buttons, a wounding attack (weak attack), and an execution attack (strong attack). Along with a block, a shield bash, a dodge roll, and a couple special abilities, you set to work slicing, crushing, and stabbing enemies with reckless abandon.

There isn’t much finesse to the combat. Jason has access to three weapons and a shield, and each is associated with a god. The mace (Ares) is slow but strong and deals more damage to shields. The sword (Hermes) is quick but weak, with long combo strings. And the spear (Athena) has the strongest execution attack, but doesn’t do much damage to shields. Finally, we have the shield (Apollo), which has a shield bash that can stagger enemies.

There’s some strategy built into these weapons, using the mace to break shields, the spear to do precise damage, or the sword for a series of quick attacks. But I often resorted to spamming attacks, becoming frustrated from enemies constantly blocking with their shields, and just trying to brute force my way through encounters. A lot of the combat’s satisfying feel is carried on the back of the execution attacks. When an enemy is near death, hitting them with an execution attack will initiate an animation with a slow down effect. It’s undeniably satisfying to see Jason chop a dude in half amid a spray of blood while the world goes into slomo for three seconds.

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Pictured: Nessus, centaur traitor, and his tamed spectral beast. There aren’t a lot of enemy types and many of them have similar patterns. But there are some creative boss fights that require more strategy than spamming attacks.

It seems like shields were meant to be a big component of the game. Jason’s shield gets its own upgrade tree assigned to Apollo, and in a super interesting design choice, Jason’s shield is always blocking. This means if you’re standing still, not pressing any buttons, and an enemy attacks Jason from the side holding his shield, the shield will still block the attack. This is true for enemies as well, and gives the impression we’re meant to try and duck and weave around attacks to hit opponents exposed sides. But the combat is so spammy, and encounters often throw a dozen or more enemies at you at once, that this just becomes unfeasible. It’s an interesting idea that ends up feeling like a gimmick because there’s no room to build effective strategy around it.

I mentioned that the shield has its own upgrade tree assigned to Apollo, each of Jason’s weapons has a dedicate upgrade tree assigned to their respective god. So Ares’ upgrade tree focuses on beefing up mace attacks, Hermes enhances sword attacks, and Athena’s improves spear attacks. Each also provides additional benefits and some magical abilities that do things like increase your damage, heal yourself and party members, leave a decoy after you dodge, and so on.

The way RotA approaches leveling up is pretty unique. The game eschews experience points, instead relying on the player dedicating “deeds” to one of the gods. Think of deeds like achievements, kill ten enemies for the first time, you get a deed and can dedicate it to a god. This also includes advancing in the story, recruiting Argonauts, and doing side quests. Dedicate enough deeds to a god and you get an aspect point, which can be used to purchase an upgrade. Rinse and repeat. It’s a clever way to make leveling up feel more involved and thematically appropriate to the fantastical Greece setting.

In-between all this stabbing and upgrading are long sections focused on dialogue. I think this is really the part of the game that’s hit or miss for a lot of players. These dialogue sections often feel drawn out and involve running back and forth in a town or village to talk to people. The dialogue itself is kept short and concise, there only being a few instances with long bits of exposition. Where the drag comes in is the need to run back and forth in a town, talking to the same handful of people over and over.

RotA uses a Mass Effect style dialogue wheel, but each line of dialogue is associated with one of the four gods presiding over Jason’s quest. Ares’ options are more aggressive, impatient, and to the point. Athena’s prioritize law, honor, and duty. Hermes’ are laissez faire, invoking a more carefree attitude. And Apollo’s are the all-around Good Dude answers, prioritizing respect for the individual. These options help make it feel like you’re influencing Jason’s personality as you play, but they’re more like you’re filling in the edges of an already predefined character. Unlike Mass Effect, options are never gated off or hidden behind upgrades, so it’s not like you’re creating a good or bad character, like might be expected in games with morality systems. Jason is Jason, despite what you pick.

Another reason players might bounce off the dialogue is the illusion of choice. In multiple scenarios RotA makes it seem like the player can affect the outcome with different dialogue choices, but all scenarios play out in a samey fashion. As far as I can tell, dialogue choices might net you some extra bits of equipment, otherwise the story will progress the same for everyone.

But! The branching dialogue does have one material benefit, when you choose an option associated with a god, it’s equivalent to dedicating deeds to that god. Which will get you more aspect points to spend on upgrades. So rest assured, running around talking to people will make you better at stabbing them later.

Self-contained stories amid a larger whole

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To get the Golden Fleece, Jason will have to find three descendants of the gods and bring them to the Oracle at Delphi. Each of these descendants are on one of three islands, and are themed around their respective gods, Ares, Hermes, and Athena.

You can choose to visit these three islands in any order, and what happens in one doesn’t affect the narrative of the others. The only difference being that you might have a different Argonaut companion, but this only affects a few offhand lines of dialogue.

Each of these three islands has a self-contained story directly related to one of the descendants you’re trying to recruit, and each is interesting and varied in their own way. The overarching narrative is relatively barebones, its these individual narratives that hook the player and carry us along.

Mycenae is the standout of the three. Homeland to Alceme, and seat of king Lycomedes, her father. When Jason lands he is greeted with a cold and disdainful atmosphere, the citizens refusing to talk to him and in some cases even jeer at you. The entirety of Mycenae blames Jason for Alceme’s death. Lycomedes refuses to hear reason, and condemns Jason to the arena as punishment for his supposed crime.

The Mycenae plot is a great example of the story’s potential, playing on all the emotional strings setup in the opening. Jason has to confront his own guilt while butting up against Lycomedes, who is using Jason as a scapegoat to preserve his own sense of power and control. It has all the ingredients to come together into a crescendo, but doesn’t hit the mark. Instead, the Jason/Lycomedes narrative peters out and we spend the rest of our time on Mycenae trying to uncover a conspiracy.

Saria, another of the three islands that you visit, gets close to this as well. But in this case, it doesn’t rely on Jason’s history with Alceme, instead revolving around Atalanta and her relationship with her adoptive centaur clan. There’s a monster loose in the jungle, and it’s killing centaurs who venture outside of their village. This means they can’t hunt, causing their food stores to dwindle. Turns out there’s a traitor in their midst somehow tied to the beast. As you try and solve the mystery, centaurs start becoming accused, causing anti-human sentiment to bubble to the surface, directed at both Jason and Atalanta.

This push and pull is the strongest introduction to one of the Argonauts, making Atalanta the most fleshed out member. Showing us Atalanta’s need to cement her place among the centaurs while also reconciling their differences is the most in-depth we get with any of the Argonauts.

Both these narratives stand out because their character-first, and it’s why the Kythra plot is the weakest. One of the three islands you visit, it has you meandering around a temple village trying to uncover a mystery with no real hook to keep the player invested.

None of these storylines ever truly shine. They each have strong setups, a variety of building blocks arrayed in the right order, but they don’t quiet fit right. And it’s the almost that’s such a letdown. So much in RotA is almost there. The pieces fit together, but they aren’t flush.

The Argonauts

The Argonauts proper, these aren’t the descendants you’re recruiting for their blood. These are the characters who will fight alongside you, wading into battle shoulder to shoulder with Jason. By the end of the game you’ll have four Argonauts to choose from—Hercules, Achilles, Atalanta, and Pan—and they’re all insufferably likable.

The Argonauts fight alongside you in combat, and accompany you as you run around towns talking to people. You can have two Argonauts in your team, alongside Jason. But whoever you choose doesn’t have a major impact on the story. They only add one-liners and a bit of extra dialogue, and that’s it. The only time the Argonauts are integral to the narrative’s forward progress are during Atalanta’s plot on Saria, for which she is a mandatory character, and the arena plot with Achilles. Otherwise, they’re just along for the ride.

Pan is a mandatory character for the Kythra plot, but all he does is provide exposition and then summon some barriers during a boss fight. So even though he’s mandatory, he could be easily edited out of the story and it’d progress as normal. It does…

Pan is a mandatory character for the Kythra plot, but all he does is provide exposition and then summon some barriers during a boss fight. So even though he’s mandatory, he could be easily edited out of the story and it’d progress as normal. It doesn’t do much to expand his character, nor does he feel integral to the Kythra plot.

The player has no control over the Argonauts, they act on their own. Atalanta firing off volleys of arrows, Achilles rushing in whirling his spear in an arc, Hercules bearhugging goons to death, and Pan firing off globules of vibrantly coloured magic. This isn’t uncommon, Mass Effect and Kingdom Hearts both have similar party systems, where your teammates act on their own.

But it feels particularly disjointed in Rise of the Argonauts because you don’t have access to the Argonauts equipment or abilities. There’s no way for you to upgrade them, change accessories, or have any influence over their abilities whatsoever. Not only does this create distance between the player and the Argonauts, but it means when Pan starts firing off green energy blasts that leave a glowing circle on the ground…I don’t know what is happening?

There’s no way for me to tell what any of the Argonauts’ abilities do, which makes it impossible to strategize. I just have to assume everything is damage and acknowledge that there is going to be no coordination. Particularly frustrating because Jason gets upgrades that slow down or stun enemies, breaks shields more effectively, heals allies, and/or gives temporary buffs to damage and defense when certain conditions are met (like taking a large amount of damage in a short period of time).

If the Argonauts have access to similar abilities, I don’t know it. Because all we get to see is a flurry of special effects with no clear indication of what’s happening. Which is why I have to assume it’s all just damage, which sucks. The combat would have been elevated by giving the player influence over the Argonauts abilities, loadouts, even just some way to pick and choose passive traits.

Hercules and what could have been

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The motivation behind why each Argonaut joins your crew is nebulous at best. Hercules and Atalanta have the most well-defined reasoning for joining Jason’s crew. Hercules because he’s a long-time friend of Jason’s and is devoted to helping him on his quest to revive Alceme, and Atalanta because she and Jason develop a deep respect and kinship after going through the Saria conspiracy together. But Achilles joins because *shrugs* adventure and glory. And Pan joins because *shrugs* adventure and stories.

I don’t think every character in Jason’s party needs or needed to have an ironclad reason for joining the Argonauts. But when this is coupled with the fact that the Argonauts have little effect on the overall story, and that the player can’t even customize their abilities in any way, it starts to feel like they’re just there. Along for the ride and nothing else.

Which brings us to Hercules. Long-time friend of Jason, there in the beginning and there in the end. We start the game with Hercules by our side, he stands as witness to Alceme’s assassination and is the first to charge into the fray alongside Jason.

And it’s why Hercules is the biggest letdown. He must have the least amount of dialogue out of all the Argonauts, and his shared past with Jason is barely touched on. Hercules could have been the standout of Rise of the Argonauts, the most memorable and beloved character. Devoted to Jason, but not unafraid to ask him hard questions. After a member of the Argo dies, Hercules asks Jason if it’s still worth it, if people dying in the pursuit of Alceme’s revival make it an immoral quest.

Jason doesn’t have a good answer, no grander justification other than he’s set his mind to it and won’t back down. Still, Hercules sticks around.

The bond between Hercules and Jason could have been something really special, the lynchpin which the Argonauts revolve. Instead, we get a lovable brute whose influence doesn’t extend past one-liners and bearhugging enemies. When it comes to missed potential, Hercules is the most egregious example.

Lack of body diversity

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From left to right (excluding Jason): Atalanta, Medea, and Medusa.

Hercules, massive, hulking, wading into battle, grabbing mercenaries one in each hand. Achilles, tall and lean, leaps amid the fray in a whirlwind of spear strikes. Pan, hooved, long horns upon his head, casts spell after spell against a charging minotaur. Jason, thewed and stocky, raising his shield against a flurry of blows. The men all get an interesting range of body types, from Hercules hulking form to Achilles tall and lean frame.

Atalanta, quick and agile, wielding her bow with expert precision, is thin with an hourglass waist. Medea, a sorceress you recruit early on who offers insight and advice, is thin with an hourglass waist. Medusa, one of the three descendants you are searching for, is…thin with an hourglass waist. Alceme too, is thin with an hourglass waist. All the women look so similar that I wouldn’t be surprised if they use the exact same base model, just altering the clothing, hair, and tattoos.

As I’m editing this I realized I’d forgotten that the centaurs in the game are all male. Though there’s a line of dialogue that alludes to female centaurs existing, they apparently just haven’t arrived yet?

As I’m editing this I realized I’d forgotten that the centaurs in the game are all male. Though there’s a line of dialogue that alludes to female centaurs existing, they apparently just haven’t arrived yet?

This has always been a problem in games, but going back into the 00s is revealing just how bad it was. I like to think we’re moving past this now, though admittedly it feels like progress has only been made these last few years.

Folks of all shapes and sizes deserve to see themselves in games, as heroes and villains and monsters. It’s particularly jarring to see this now, when just these past several weeks the internet became (rightfully) enamored with Lady Dimitrescu from Resident Evil Village, featured in this story trailer.

Glitches, stuttering, and crashes

Sometimes the camera would whip around to the left or right, making Jason barrel into a wall. If I took too many screenshots, the game would crash. Jason had a tendency to get stuck on corners that were a foot away from him. And the Argonauts just love standing in narrow doorways, blocking your path until you nudge them out of the way. All while there are constant framerate dips, particularly in areas with a lot of NPCs.

And there was one boss fight that glitched and became unbeatable, so I had to close and restart the game. And another boss fight where, for who knows why, whenever Jason blocked an attack his arms would shoot five feet into the air and twirl around like elastic bands.

There’s just a lot of little things that all start to add up.

On top of that is the fact the game has zero graphics options on PC, other than a resolution option. Which left me with diving into my graphics card’s control panel to try and tweak the performance, it didn’t do much.

I know it’s a twelve year old game, and there should be an expectation for it to be rough around the edges, but I don’t think it’s unreasonable to expect a certain level of stability. These compounding technical issues make it harder to enjoy the good in a game that’s already mired in letdowns.

Do I recommend it?

No.

There is a lot of potential here, but Rise of the Argonauts doesn't fully realize it. I like the fantasy version of ancient Greece, and their willingness to altar Greek myth. But spammy combat, long stretches of running back and forth to speak with NPCs, technical issues, and an overall sense that the game was stapled together in a rush keep me from being able to recommend it. The likable Argonauts, cool aesthetics, and moments when the combat clicks aren't enough to elevate Rise of the Argonauts to a must play. Though I do genuinely think RotA deserves either a sequel or spiritual successor that can truly take the good elements and refine them. There’s amazing potential here, it just needs a second chance.


Interlude

With the well-deserved popularity of Hades, I thought a fitting interlude for today's issue of Hello Void would be a look to the past with a song from Bastion, Supergiant Games’ first game. I can't believe Bastion came out nine years ago. But clearly, Supergiant started out strong, and I hope they'll keep going strong into the future. Speaking of, I've got to do a couple more Hades runs.


What am I Working On?

I’ve been noodling on a few things, none likely to be finished anytime soon. I’ve been writing a sci-fi novel since forever (okay, only like a year and a bit), and it’s been slow going. It started out as galactic barbarians wreaking havoc but may have turned into a found family story. I’ve also got a couple comic scripts I keep eyeballing, but haven’t found the motivation to dive into them, mostly because the path towards actually putting them out into the world is fraught and likely expensive.

But what I really wanted to talk about is a novella I’ve been revising. I started it in 2018, trunked it in 2020, and have recently un-trunked it to give it a second look. It’s a bizarre interdimensional fantasy book that treats the in-world magic with absolute shameless abandon. I’d been so caught up on the idea of magic systems for so long, that I ended up needing to write something that went in the totally opposite direction. The result is a story with no concrete magic systems, monster that leap through dimensions, friendly gorgons, and a hero who (sorta) can’t die.

It's weird and chaotic and I love it. But I don’t know if it’s a fit for any of the current markets, though I guess what I really mean is I don’t know if it’s good.

I have a fondness for novellas, these little stories that are books but not novels. Long enough to really get into a story, though short enough that they’re not a huge time commitment. Novellas seem to be having a small resurgence, with Tor.com routinely putting out amazing books, and just recently Rebellion Publishing announced its new novella line, Solaris Satellites (which looks awesome and shoutout to the all Canadian lineup!).

Placing a novella is still tricky, despite this new resurgence. Being unagented means I have to rely on the few markets open to unsolicited submission. It’s hard trying to find a home for any kind of story, from short stories to novels. Wading through listings and desperately trying to swim up the slush feels like a herculean task. In the past there haven’t been a lot of open submission calls for novellas, maybe a few a year with short submission windows. Which gets narrowed down further if your book doesn’t fit the publisher’s market/genre.

But maybe this is changing. The past few years Tor.com has been intent on kicking down the door and thrusting novellas into our to-be-read piles. Rebellion Publishing has also been regularly putting out novellas via their Solaris and Abaddon Books imprints (*cough* you can read The Boneman in Three Stories About Ghosts *cough*), alongside a handful of small presses that have been publishing amazing stuff. And just recently both Tor Nightfire and Uncanny Magazine announced novella submissions will be open later in the year.

Hopefully this will start a trend of more publishers opening up for unagented novella submissions. I adore these little not-novels and want to see more of them out in the world.


Signing Off

Thus concludes Hello Void issue #1. I think it’s fitting for the first issue to focus on a peculiar game that’s only intriguing to a niche of a niche. I don’t know why I have such oddball interests, but I hope you’ve gotten some value out of this newsletter and will stick around for the next issue.

If you’d like to find me around the web, you can visit my Twitter, or check out my website, matthewmarchitto.com, where you’ll find links to all my work.

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Thanks for reading!


Banner Photo by Patrick Carr on Unsplash