Sxynix Posted December 17, 2020 Posted December 17, 2020 Lost Wing (PC, Switch [reviewed], Xbox One, PS4) Developer: Boxfrog Games Publisher: 2Awesome Studio Released: July 31, 2020 MSRP: $7.99 Lost Wing tells the narrative of the world’s last space car driver as they attempt to bring racing back to the hearts of the denizens of a dystopian future while simultaneously trying to somehow remove the demon currently possessing their left leg. I made that all up. I don’t think there is a story. Instead, Lost Wing seems to focus more on presenting environments to chase high scores in. There’s a couple flavors to this; you can play the “campaign” missions where you race through procedurally generated garbage-strewn streets in an effort to meet and beat the boss, or you can do special challenge missions where you weave through bespoke tracks to reach the end with the most allotted points. Visually, Lost Wing is simultaneously nice to look at while also being rather generic. The ships that you fly are pretty interchangeable with what you might find in any futuristic racer. The HUD is projected on the wall, integrated into the environment nicely, but the neon is a little distracting. It’s sometimes hard to discern certain obstacles that are coming at you, leaving you to memorize their slight differences in size and color to tell how many shots you should lob at them. Likewise, the soundtrack that seems to be key to the game’s aesthetic is merely serviceable. I feel like Lost Wing would fit better with driving, percussion-heavy music, but it seems to settle for quirky or atmospheric. You’re able to pick what song you listen to while speeding through the tracks, but I never really found one that I preferred. I never found an equivalent to Fever from Dr. Mario or Splash Wave from Out Run. The main gameplay loop is maybe a little oversimple. You race from one end of the track to the other through a winding corridor. You’re able to shoot obstacles in front of you, but you’re given a limited amount of ammunition that is only refilled by boosting or picking up orbs off the track. That adds a bit of strategy through managing resources, but, really, I rarely took my finger off the boost, so I almost always had stock unless I died before the boss. It’s a game that you’re going to die in, probably a lot. You’re given three lives to reach the boss, and until you’re able to moderate your speed and control your shots, you’ll likely struggle to even make it that far. A head-on collision will kill you immediately, but if you clip your wing, your ship will merely be hobbled until a repair pickup is found. You can also slow down time, but I only found this useful when I hit a screen flip pickup and needed a moment to get my bearings. It uses the same ammunition as your weapon. You can also use bombs to clear an area around your ship for a short time, but I often forgot these existed. I suppose if you’re going to go after the top spot on the leaderboard, there’s a reasonably high skill ceiling. This leads to the game’s larger problem, which is that, at launch, the leaderboards are pretty dead, at least on Switch. It may take some effort to gain the lead on the first level on easy, but after that, the competition is less than fierce. On two of the challenges I tested out, I received first place simply by completing them. I didn’t have any tricks, nor did I go out of my way to collect more points, but I still landed comfortably in the top spot. I'm writing this a few days after its release, so this could change after some time. That’s not necessarily Lost Wing’s fault — it wasn’t designed to have a barren leaderboard — but that’s kind of the problem: it wasn’t designed with the idea that this could happen. It offers very little outside score chasing, so when that falls flat, there’s nothing to fall back on. I did enjoy what time I spent with Lost Wing, though that didn’t exactly last long. With three tracks, a handful of challenges, and a boss rush, the content is a little thin. It’s definitely priced with that in mind, however, so if you’re looking for something to fill an afternoon, you could certainly do worse. I just don’t think it’s something I’m going to keep coming back to. ------------------------------------------------- Lost Wing System Requirments -------------------------------------------------- Minimum ----------------------------------------------------- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system. OS: Windows 7. Processor: IvyBridge i5. Memory: 4 GB RAM. Graphics: NVIDIA GTX 660. Storage: 1 GB available space. -------------------------------------- Recommended -------------------------------------- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system. OS: Windows 10 Processor: IvyBridge i7 Memory: 8 GB RAM. Graphics: NVIDIA GTX 960 Storage: 1 GB available space. ----------------------------------------
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