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Deals on The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt & Hearts of Stone, STASIS, Victor Vran, Sanitarium and more...

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Something scary this way comes. STASIS is a spiritual successor to Sanitarium in the grungy hand-drawn art, music composed by the legendary Mark Morgan of Fallout and Planescape: Torment fame, and a constant, overwhelming feeling of loneliness and insanity.

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Licurg: I'm sorely tempted to buy Stasis... But is it good ? I mean, it's probably good, but is it Sanitarium-level good ?
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Licurg: Also, how long is it ?
It took me 9 hours to complete, didn't get notably stuck anywhere but played at a leisurely pace, reading all the data pads that are lying around the spaceship some of which contain important clues but for the most part it's extra padding to the story so whether one enjoys reading all that or not is to a large degree a matter of preference and very often not relevant to solving puzzles. It's definitely a very wordy game and I'd say I spent a good third of the playtime reading through data pads.
I spent some time diddle-daddling around just to look at the detailed environments so an average playtime might be shorter, around 7-8 hours. Less than 7 hours is rushing through and self-sabotage if one pays that amount of money for an adventure game, and I'm calling BS on first-time playthroughs of less than 6 hours. They end up being all cranky about not getting their money's worth so I'd highly recommend playing it in connoisseur mode to really soak up all the excellent audiovisual bits. Replay value is super limited as it's an entirely linear game but I did enjoy starting over the game to play it in Italian to brush up my awful Italian skills.

As for Santitarium vs Stasis, there are obvious similarities in terms of presentation and gameplay but the two games are quite different, here is an explanation I posted in the subforums:


Story:

Sanitarium is more of a twisted psycho mind trip, Stasis is a conventional sci-fi horror story where you're all alone on a spaceship and have to figure your way from A to B and get past problems while slowly discovering the story via data logs that you find on the way.

Gameplay/Puzzles:

Both games are traditional point & click adventures with hotpots that you click on and items that you can carry around. The puzzles in Stasis feel more organically incorporated into the story, meaning there is a logical reason for what you need to do and it follows scientific laws for the most part. In Sanitarium, there are some esoteric puzzles and some weird machinery puzzles that rely more on experimentation.

Sanitarium is generally more challenging and not always in a good way. In Stasis, things make more sense. Even if it's science fiction & horror, you still use objects in ways that more closely relate to how you would use them in the real world. In both games you simply use the left mouse button to interact with things (right mouse button to walk in Sanitarium) and that's it, very simple controls for both games.

Backtracking is not a problem in either game, you never have a huge area to access in either of them. Backtracking is no issue in Stasis, the game closes off access to areas behind you as you progress and you'll only have access to a handful screens at a time. So no worries about having to backtrack through the whole ship to find a tiny item you forgot to pick up in the first place.

Pixel hunting was a bit more of an issue in Sanitarium and despite the higher level of detail in Stasis, items are logically placed where one would expect to find them.

In Stasis, there are no combat scenes like the boss fights Sanitarium has. There are only very few timed puzzles in Stasis but nothing that requires super precise timing or accuracy.

Scenery:

Sanitarium has chapters with completely changing scenery, in Stasis you're always on the same ship. Different decks looks different according to their function but the overall design is consistent, this is not a downside though as the level of detail is very impressive and there are all kinds of interesting little details and animated parts and sound effects that spice things up.

Stasis looks like "Sanitarium in Space" and the gameplay is traditional point & click material in both but Stasis tells a more straightforward sci-fi horror story that will remind you of many famous movies and games, the developers list Event Horizon, Alien etc as some of their inspirations and you'll find references to many other movies and games in Stasis as you progress through the game.

Sanitarium focuses much more on the psyche of the protagonist whereas the star of the show in Stasis is the screwed up spaceship itself and you're just a random victim that finds himself aboard that ship, trying to find a way out. Both games try to mess with your mind but Sanitarium does it more successfully by ripping you from one stage to a completely different one, making you question your own sanity. In Stasis, you just want to figure a way out of the mess around you, not the mess -inside- you. Both games are very atmospheric and if you like Sanitarium, you're pretty much bound to get Stasis because there are very few games in this style.


edit: typos
Post edited October 30, 2015 by awalterj
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awalterj:
Great write up on both counts awalterj!
STASIS come to me...
This is a nice sale. Picked up a load of games for not to much money!

Thanks! .. GOG
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awalterj: snip
Bought .
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awalterj: -snip-
Now that's a proper reply! +1 :)

Now I know what I'm playing next: Sanitarium
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awalterj: *snip*
+1 for an excellent detailed response. Something which GOG really needs at times. Makes a nice change from reviews like "ZOMG, This game is awesome, I played it lots when I was in my 20's / high school / primary school/ a child / sperm in a vial. GET IT NOW!!!!"

Just added STASIS to the wishlist, the only reason I'm not buying it is because my laptop doesn't meet the system requirements. Otherwise, I'd have just bought it them and there :(
Post edited October 29, 2015 by IwubCheeze
Victor Iran seems to release their pre-order bonus, so I buy it.
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awalterj: *snip*
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IwubCheeze: +1 for an excellent detailed response. Something which GOG really needs at times. Makes a nice change from reviews like "ZOMG, This game is awesome, I played it lots when I was in my 20's / high school / primary school/ a child / sperm in a vial. GET IT NOW!!!!"
Nostalgia is a wonderful thing, it's just not very useful to the next person :D

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IwubCheeze: Just added STASIS to the wishlist, the only reason I'm not buying it is because my laptop doesn't meet the system requirements. Otherwise, I'd have just bought it them and there :(
You can always try the free alpha demo to see if the game runs on your system, the file size is 1 GB and there is a direct download for both Windows and OSX:
http://stasisgame.com/web/page.php?p=download

The final version of the game is more polished than the alpha demo. There are more lighting effects, sound effects, textural details as well as additional puzzles but if the demo runs fine, the full version should do so, too. I had big concerns because it says shared memory is not supported and I have Intel HD Graphics which is a very weak GPU. Then again, all the other 2D graphics heavy Visionaire engine games (Daedalic adventures like The Night of The Rabbit, The Whispered World etc) run flawlessly on my system despite the official shared memory cards not recommended verdict. In any way, Stasis runs entirely smooth on my laptop (2 GHz Intel Dualcore, 4GB RAM, Win7). ALT+TAB out of the game is no problem and loading times are quick.
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Spectre: Deadly Premonition as a game was good but it was a sloppy port to the PC.
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JLH: initially yes it was terrible. but they've patched it up. now all the problems are in the game's design. aspects of it felt unfinished. like the fact that you can look through windows for a peeping tom adventure but you never see anything cool (unless I've missed something...???). combat was repetitive too and some of the textures were ps3 quality here...and sadly ps2 quality in other spots. overall I LOVED deadly premonition though. although alan wake is a technically superior game in the graphics and gameplay department....deadly premonition is one of the best games for mood/atmosphere although alan wake does a good job there too. like I said...I recommend both to anyone who hasn't tried them. :)
I loved DP too, but it's not a game for everyone. If you are able to look beyond the (many) problems, there's a unique experience in there, but many won't have the patience.
From personal experience, if you have a laptop with an integrated graphics card, don't pick up Amnesia if that's your main machine. You'll just get a black screen with no real way to fix it. Updating video card drivers does nothing.
If you have something else, go for it, it's immersive and a pleasant mix of Lovecraftian and Gothic horror.

Should I pick up the Dracula trilogy or Nosferatu?
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DeMignon: I can recommend The Last Door, even though the story isn't finished yet. Hopefully there will be a sequel sometime.
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Grargar: They have already released some episodes of the sequel on their site and Steam and are planning a full release for Early 2016.
Great! Thanks for the heads-up, Grargar.
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Post edited October 29, 2015 by Fairfox
I've got a feeling that by mistake GOG didn't make Stasis Deluxe Edition and the Deluxe Edition upgrade have a 40% off discount. I don't see the discount on those versions of the game, steam does and I got this email from the developer (I was a backer)

"As Halloween approaches you'll be happy to know
that STASIS (THE 2D ISOMETRIC HORROR ADVENTURE GAME)
is on SALE for $14,99 on both STEAM and GOG.

You can save 40% on STASIS Deluxe and Standard!"

So hence I think GOG missed applying the discount to the Deluxe edition. I've emailed the developer to see if indeed it was meant to be discounted on GOG, though can't think why they wouldn't want to discount it.
Stasis and The Cat Lady go into my treat bag. I usually watch horror movies on Halloween but this time around I shall play spooky games instead!