Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Beaten: Two Worlds (360)

 The summer of 2024 has been bittersweet for fans of the Xbox 360 as Microsoft has pulled the plug on the online store for the console, ending a long era of support for the legendary system. It had to happen but it’s still a bitter pill to swallow.

The sweet part is a wave of nostalgia across the internet as many gamers post videos and social media posts recollecting the glory days of the console. I’ve never stopped playing on my old XBox 360, which has survived the red ring of death, a lightning strike/power surge which took out its ethernet connector, and a hard drive upgrade. As of this writing, the disc drive door is scting fussy.

In addition to a wave of last-minute downloaded games arriving on my 360, my physical disc collection is once again growing thanks to a local mom and pop video game store near my office. One game that has languished in my 360 backlog for too long is Two Worlds, a full action RPG released in 2007 by Polish studio Reality Pump.

Oddly enough, I had played and finished Two Worlds 2 on the Playstation 3 back in 2011 but at the time dismissed the idea of going back and playing the first game as the reviews were pretty mediocre. It was a good, solid RPG too, if not quirky and a little “off” in a delightful way indicative of a non traditional game studio.

That right there is the rub of my love of games from this era. For every Grand Theft Auto IV or Elder Scrolls Oblivion, there were dozens of full-effort, packed with loads of content and story games released by studios trying their best, and sometimes failing.

Two Words was surprisingly stable, with only a few crashes during my play through. It’s really a sprawling open world RPG with good combat, lots of NPCs with quests, factions, and everything one could want. The graphics are what one would expect from the early XBox 360 days, but I found them good enough.

The voice actor who voices the player’s character was thankfully in this one too, as his snarky comments here and there were a source of amusement. 

As usual, I did not dig too deeply into the complexities of character development. Nor did I scour the map for every scrap of content; but rather I completed enough side quests to level up my character enough that, when the path opened up to the endgame, I was ready.

Two Worlds is a different enough, functional enough, and fun enough game to recommend to those with a taste for a unique studio’s take on the action RPG. Even though this game was lost in the crowd of XBox 360 releases back then, it can certainly stand out as a hidden gem in one’s 360 library to this day.