Disco Elysium: The Final Cut (PlayStation) – It Cuts Well On Console, Too

REVIEW – Here’s a good game, Disco Elysium: The Final Cut especially for those who like RPGs, as well as investigation. If you enjoyed Planescape: Torment, Disco Elysium will be a good choice. And if you have not played it yet for whatever reason, you no longer should find an excuse to skip ZA/UM’s game, as now it’s also available on consoles!

 

How typical: you awake with a hard hangover in a hotel room, with bonus amnesia added to the mix. Therefore, it’s completely up to you during this deep RPG – including the dialogue system that is as complex as Planescape’s was – what you make out of your character, and, as expected, whatever you do and say will have an impact on the story (the story that got expanded since the original, released in 2019!) and the other characters.

 

 

What’s it like on PlayStation?

 

Well, the PlayStation 5 has shorter loading times. The reason it doesn’t get a higher rating here is that if you’re moving around a lot (think the good old institution of fast travel), it might take an embarrassingly long time, even on the new Sony console. And on the PlayStation 4/PlayStation 4 Pro duo, it’s undoubtedly going to be annoying. Performance has been… hmm, well, that’s why I’ve lowered the final score. It doesn’t run at a stable 60 FPS on PlayStation 5. For this game, I would expect it to run flawlessly. But no, sometimes it even crashes. And on older Sony machines, you get the same thing, but with more restrained performance…

 

 

Disco

 

Aside from the dialogue, your character’s skills will also matter, as you will have no less than twenty-four of them, covering a wide range of abilities (from logic to authority, there are both physical and mental attributes), and since I used the investigation term intentionally in the intro paragraph, there are some skills that could come in handy here and there (for example, if you have more logic, you can see the case much easier), but on the other hand, you might miss a few factors that you would otherwise see normally with different skills. And even then, I didn’t even mention that the skills form up during your character creation based on your base stats (psyche, motorics, physique, intellect), and since we are talking about an RPG, levelling up will also happen, and you can thus improve your skills. On top of all that, the thoughts need to be mentioned, too – these (three at max initially) will get into your head while talking to other people, and over time, you might see a stat buff, plus your mental state might change as well. This paragraph is effectively trying to express that you can have an entirely different experience during a second playthrough if you compared it to the first one.

The story, set in the city of Revachol, just underlines it even more – it was written perfectly, even if you will be mostly in the city’s Martinaise district (and somehow, I first wrote Martiniase, even though I rarely drink alcohol…). The characters will not hold themselves back. For me, seeing the anarchic, dirty comments from them was highly enjoyable, and in return, the ambience was great, too. No matter where you go (as the developers tried to give you complete freedom), the dark tone and style will remain, although it will be mostly in text, as there is no complete voice acting in Disco Elysium – this might be the biggest issue in the game, as most of the time, you will either hear your old reptilian brain, or Kitsuragi, your partner. At least they sound great. The rest, not so well.

 

 

Elysium

 

You can solve the case in any way or approach you want. This thought is the reason why I can say the replayability has increased the score. This is the game that you can talk about with your friends, sharing experiences. I might say I had an X experience, while someone else might have had a Y, or even a Z one instead of X. It all opens up at the point where your skills will not block you entirely in progressing through the game – via them, you can get through your tasks in a different manner, and therefore, there is a lot of variety. You just have to get through the visuals, though, as in my opinion, Disco Elysium looks a little weak on this front – those who judge games by the visuals will decide after two screenshots that they don’t care about the game, and they might miss out on something amazing: this game is one of the biggest surprises on PC. Just PC, as the game is currently available on Steam and GOG – the work of ZA/UM (what a weird name…) can’t be found elsewhere just yet.

So the visuals might be the other weak point of the game, but I have to express that the developers perfectly recreated the CRPG style, and they were inspired by the Infinity Engine. BioWare? BioWare. Not today’s, and I’m sorry to say it, sold out, braindead BioWare, but the one from twenty years ago. The team that made Baldur’s Gate and Icewind Dale. So if you like tabletop RPGs (and I feel that there is a renaissance of them in video game adaptations – just look how Werewolf and Vampire – The Masquerade is getting game adaptations…), you will feel yourself at home, even without the clicky combat.

 

 

What did The Final Cut bring?

 

We now have a political compass that could bring us to the solution in different ways. There’s a new location that puts more emphasis on how much of a mark can we leave behind. The political boost to this game might be difficult for a few players to swallow, but instead of pissing a certain group off, I’ll rather piss everyone or nobody off, as I’m simply NOT going to consider that in the rating. It’s a new addition, nevertheless. Also, I have to mention that ZA/UM’s game now has full voice acting. If you play on a controller, the controls will be easier, considering how the game was now meant to be playable on consoles, too. On PlayStation 5, you can easily expect 4K and 60 frames per second, given you have a beefy enough display. If you already had the original, don’t worry: you get The Final Cut as a free upgrade! Fair enough.

 

 

Number 9, Number 9, Number 9, Number 9…

 

Disco Elysium gets a nine out of ten (which also applies to The Final Cut, although this 9 is a little weaker on PlayStation), as it doesn’t give a rat’s ass about the trends and the current day. Instead, it is a decent CRPG. If only it looked a bit better, and if only it had a bit more audio, then it would honestly be a 9.5. It has a decent story, great gameplay, perfect ambience – and its spec requirements are low as well, it could even run on a toaster. Thankfully, the extended edition of the game didn’t ruin the experience at all.

-V-

Pro:

+ Perfect ambience
+ It was written nicely
+ Replayability in ALL CAPS

Against:

– The audio is not so subpar as before
– It should look a bit better
– I gave it a 9 for a good reason… I’m not going to nitpick!


Publisher: ZA/UM

Developer: ZA/UM

Genre: CRPG

Release date: March 31, 2021

Disco Elysium: The Final Cut

Gameplay - 9.3
Graphics - 7.2
Story - 9.8
Music/audio - 8.7
Ambience - 9.8

9

AWESOME

Disco Elysium gets a nine out of ten (which also applies to The Final Cut, although this 9 is a little weaker on PlayStation), as it doesn't give a rat's ass about the trends and the current day. Instead, it is a decent CRPG. If only it looked a bit better, and if only it had a bit more audio, then it would honestly be a 9.5. It has a decent story, great gameplay, perfect ambience - and its spec requirements are low as well, it could even run on a toaster. Thankfully, the extended edition of the game didn't ruin the experience at all.

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Grabbing controllers since the middle of the nineties. Mostly he has no idea what he does - and he loves Diablo III. (Not.)

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