
And frankly speaking, no one wants a Half-Life or BioShock clone. And we think that an endeavour like that can’t be boiled down to some rules of thumb and data-driven development decisions like ‘put this, this, and this so you create a masterpiece of a game’. We wanted to create a game that will captivate and immerse you. And we always wanted to create something like that. There are not so many titles like that nowadays. The games that make you take a vacation to fully immerse yourself in their worlds. Mundfish: First and foremost, these are truly exceptional, generation-defining games. What is it about those games that has stood the test of time for you, and how does Atomic Heart build on those ideas, lessons and philosophies? RPS: You've spoken about how you want to create a game that stands alongside titles such as Bioshock, Fallout and Doom. We posted some questions to the dev team at large, digging up more info on Atomic Heart’s trailblazer aspirations, the source of all that perverted Russian science, and the challenges and importance of the game’s ambitious visual design. Here it be, and there’s also an original Russian version if you’d prefer less questionable lip syncing.ĭespite the Glove's proximity to BioShock's Plasmids, word from developers Mundfish is that this won't be a retread of immersive sims past. Not to mention some fresh looks at Atomic Heart’s combat, which blends axes and AK-47s with the the superpowers of "the Glove". And in the meantime, there’s plenty of weirdness to pick apart in the trailer: moustachioed androids, giant drill worms, a flying city, and that pyromaniac nan from the E3 2022 trailer. This does at least narrow Atomic Heart’s release date to the final four months of the year. There’s your release window, puzzle fans. As in, “#ber” literally pops up on screen.


It looks like the four-year wait for answers will end this year, though: a new story trailer ends with confirmation of a 2022 launch, apparently in a month ending in “ber”. Freaky sci-fi shooter Atomic Heart has often been as mysterious as the Soviet research base-cum-house of robot horrors it takes place in.
