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The RPS Selection Box: Jeremy’s bonus games of the year 2024Hauntings and dragons and whips

Hauntings and dragons and whips

Image credit:RPS

Image credit:RPS

Screenshots of An English Haunting, Dragon’s Dogma 2 and Vampire Survivors: Ode To Castlevania.

2024 was my first full year at RPS, and as a guides writer, it was a year packed with the sort of games that make you roll your sleeves up, wipe sweat from your brow, and stare up at the sky from the trenches, ruminating on what life is like when you aren’t dealing with back-to-back Soulslikes interspersed with gacha games that feature incomprehensible lootbox mechanics.

An English Haunting

Fans of the Laura Bow franchise and Gaslight Cthulhu should definitely check out An English Haunting. |Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Postmodern Adventures

Two characters stand before a group of stones jutting out from the earth in the Scottish countryside in An English Haunting.

Alice B (RPS in peace!)quite liked An English Hauntingwhen she dove into the demo last April. I enjoyed it as well, and one of us probably would have reviewed the final game, but alas, it slipped through the cracks during a time of staff turnover here in the Treehouse. Well, I’m speaking up after the fact to announce thatAn English Hauntingis a worthy point and click experience that does a lovely job of sending you to 1907 England (and Scotland) to investigate the mysteries of the great beyond. You play a scholar named Professor Patrick Moore who’s all into the spiritualism and séances that gripped the time period, and you’ve got 72 hours to prove the existence of ghosts before the Metapsychic Investigations department at your university shuts down. Egad!

I’m a sucker for Victorian and Edwardian-era stories, so An English Haunting tickles all the parts of me that lust for mysteries in gaslit streets, perferably starring gumshoes in tweed suits. It also gets the side of me that loves horror and wishes that more point-and-click adventure games would dabble in the occult, so if you’re attracted to this same eclectic mix, give this one a go. You can expect great attention to setting, puzzles that don’t stretch the logic of what’s feasible, and even a short sequence where you play as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself, who was also busy believing in spirits when he wasn’t devising ways to kill Sherlock.

My only critique of An English Haunting is that the adventure drags in its middle section (the Scottish expedition isn’t as good as it could be), and the overall experience isn’t quite as tight as Postmodern Adventures' previous work,Nightmare Frames, which was an ode to ’80s slasher horror. (This is only because Nightmare Frames was reallydamngood and deeply deserves your download if you haven’t already.) But if you stick through to the end, you’ll receive a marvelous finale, along with some of the only jump scares that I’ve ever experienced in a point-and-click.

Dragon’s Dogma 2

Dragon’s Dogma 2, a game where a fight like this is commonplace and just another Tuesday. |Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Capcom

A group of adventurers fight a pus-ridden lesser dragon in Dragon’s Dogma 2.

I enjoyed the stuffing out ofDragon’s Dogma 2. From a guides writing perspective, it was the first major project that I led amongst our small team, pumping out everything fromclass guidesto abig ol' walkthrough, which Ollie started and I finished. From a player’s perspective, I simply dig the weirdness on display here, as well as Dragon Dogma 2’s devotion to letting you do just about whatever you can imagine and then live with the results. Such are the consequences of playing in a giant sandbox, Dragon’s Dogma 2 says, now deal with them! I respect that gumption, and I respect the fact that this is a “Capcom ass game,” as it was often described in the work Slack. Whether it’s the memorable Pawn system of AI companions who grow on you as the game progesses, the “climb on the back of this griffon and slash it a billion times as it wiggles Dance Dance Revolution-style” boss fights, or simply the excellent character models of the RE Engine putting in work, this is Capcom throwing all of its paint at the wall to see what sticks, and the end result is more than a little messy, but very fun.

As a devotee of tabletop RPGs, I also admire Dragon’s Dogma 2 for basically acting as the equivalent of a Game Master who is not so much concerned with the plot of their campaign, but rather the goofy story that the players decide to tell along the way. This includes them deciding to use the Unmaking Arrow - which kills anything in a single hit - on a random NPC that they’ve accidentally been romancing because the entire romance system is unexplained and kind of arbitrary. Everyone remembers those kinds of TTRPG nights, and that’s why I remember Dragon’s Dogma 2.

Vampire Survivors: Ode to Castlevania

Quincy Morris finally stars in a Castlevania game. Where’s his Bowie knife, though?! |Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/poncle

Quincy Morris stands in the midst of hundreds of attacking enemies in the Vampire Survivors: Ode to Castlevania DLC.