Replaying that section and going right ended in a stealth section with multiple Watchers patrolling a mine that I had to climb. One path I chose left and ended up fighting two flying machines in a difficult fight that required fire arrows to make it easier. There are paths you can choose to go one way or another, and the result of those choices makes for quite a different game. It’s worth noting that Horizon Call of the Mountain is a decent length as well. There are movement options to mitigate this, and eye tracking is utilised in smart ways, but even that can be turned off as well. You might be new, and that’ll make you get motion sickness pretty quickly. For example, I have played VR a lot so I wanted full freedom to move with the sticks smoothly. Whether you want to play standing or sitting, you can adjust so much of Call of the Mountain to suit how used to VR you are. The accessibility options for how you can play, by the way, are to be applauded. Instead you’re left criss-crossing hands, and finding yourself at all manner of obtuse angles that make no sense. It’s clear from conversations with others in the game that Ryas is a master at climbing, but the upper body strength required to almost shimmy on your hands above a beam is just ridiculous, and forcing a slower, more methodical climbing aspect would have enhanced the immersion no end. Perhaps the market for those who have actually done climbing and Horizon isn’t a big overlap, but I think most people know you can’t really easily free climb with your hands at waist height. On top of that, you can move at some pace, swinging hand over hand as you sidle along a rope or wood building, and it just doesn’t look right. My suspicion here is that the developer intended for you to move your head and body in a fully 3D space, but the truth is that few people have the room required to make this a reality. While moving up and round mountains you will likely have to adjust your viewpoint with the right stick. It’s hard to articulate, but it just doesn’t feel quite right. In truth, the only thing that lets this one down is the climbing. Similar to how the main games make it obvious where you can reach to and move upwards or sideways, Horizon Call of the Mountain gives visual clues, too. As Ryas, a former Shadow Carja, you are a climber to rival even Aloy. Outside of combat, you’ll spend a lot of time climbing. It requires you to properly move your hands in a 3D space, and while it might irritate some people, it’s a show of technological prowess, for sure. One early use of this truly shows off both the fidelity of the visuals, and how good the inside-out tracking is for the controllers, as you have to tie a rope around a climbing tool slowly, to ensure it’s stable for future use. These, like tools you use as well, must be crafted at first, and by that I mean you manually have to create them. Despite at first seeming like this slows the encounters down, in fact it becomes a frantic battle to keep out of the way while getting arrows on target, and you’ll likely even work up a sweat in some spots.Īs you progress, the arrows you’d craft from the other Horizon games are present. You will be locked into a reasonably large area, depending on the foe, and you can strafe with the left stick, or dodge quickly with the right. While you have free roam to move about as you want during exploratory sections, combat is based around arena style encounters. It’s satisfying, and there’s a good degree of aim-assistance so you aren’t missing all the time as well.Ĭombat is slightly different to how I’ve seen other VR-shooters handle things. You simply have to bring your bow from over your shoulder and an arrow from the other, then place it over the bow, pull back and fire. Likewise, plunging into the water, jumping from cliff to rope, and taking on the many machines from the world of Horizon are all fun and intuitive. Even having built a Tallneck in Lego form, seeing the underneath of its foot, the cables, wires, and metal moving as it nobly strides above me, was a fantastic experience. The vistas, machines, and even returning characters look the part, and have incredible attention to detail. Stunning vistas that you’ve seen as flatter looking versions in Forbidden West and Zero Dawn are fully realised in Call of the Mountain. Make no mistake, as a technical showcase, Horizon Call of the Mountain does its job. The world of Horizon has been ripe for additional entries since the first game, and while Horizon Call of the Mountain offers a unique way to explore the world previously only investigated by Aloy and is mostly a great experience, it doesn’t quite manage to avoid some pitfalls along the way.
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