With this release SUPERHOT Team has decided to try something a little new. Unlike the first Superhot or Superhot VR, the majority of levels in Superhot: Mind Control Delete are not scripted affairs. It’s one of Superhot: Mind Control Deletes strengths, though it unfortunately enhances the fatigue caused by the heavy repetition and randomization found throughout the game. That, and it frankly wouldn’t be Superhot is it looked any different. The minimalist art style ensures players are able to focus on the action without being bogged down by too much visual noise. The series has always been a bit of a cerebral shooter, as you slowly piece together a plan of action to tackle the opposition, with time trickling by until you make your move. This isn’t a complaint: the simple, easy to parse art is part and parcel why Superhot works as well as it does. The visuals are sharper and performance is better in Mind Control Delete than they were in the first Superhot, but the visual language hasn’t changed an iota. Levels are white playing fields filled with black interactable objects that you’ll use to stun and kill an onslaught of red enemies eager to end your life. In Superhot: Mind Control Delete you’ve become one with the system, and the fundamentals remain largely unchanged. Superhot: Mind Control Delete is a larger, bolder game than the older sibling it was initially created to expand, though not always for the better. Superhot’s origins as a participate in the 7 Day FPS Game Jam were belied by its length: while it featured a few hours of entertainment at launch, it banked of replayability over breadth. Superhot: Mind Control Delete – Random Access Memory. You’ll still punch, shoot, and slice your bright red foes into oblivion, all while avoiding their attacks yourself, yet this time around you’ll be doing so within the framework of a more traditional roguelike. The narrative from both Superhot and Superhot VR carries over, sure, but how you interact with Mind Control Delete couldn’t be more different in execution. Superhot: Mind Control Delete is not a sequel, but a spinoff of sorts.
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