Deponia (video game)
Deponia | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Daedalic Entertainment |
Publisher(s) | Daedalic Entertainment
|
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows OS X Linux[1] iPad[2] PlayStation 4 |
Release | 27 January 2012 (German) 7 August 2012 (English) 8 July 2014 (Linux)[1] August 2015 (iPad)[2] |
Genre(s) | Point-and-click adventure |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Deponia is a 2.5D point-and-click adventure, developed and published by Daedalic Entertainment. The original version in German was released on January 27, 2012, with the title a play on the German word "Deponie", which means "landfill site". An English version of the game was later released on 7 August that year. [4] The game's story sees players taking on the role of an inhabitant of the junk planet Deponia, as they attempt to seek a new life on the floating city known as Elysian, but become embroiled with the task of helping one of the city's inhabitants to return to their home and uncovering a plot that threatens their home planet.
The game is the first installment in the Deponia series - a sequel, Chaos on Deponia, was published on 12 October 2012; a third installment, Goodbye Deponia, was published on 15 October 2013; and a fourth installment, Deponia Doomsday, was published on March 1, 2016. In July 2015, Daedalic Entertainment announced that the series would be available on iPad, with the first chapter releasing in mid-August.[2]
Gameplay
Like most forms of point-and-click adventure games, players take on the role of a character who must solve a variety of puzzles. Objects in the game can be manipulated, or picked up to be used to overcome obstacles or combined with other inventory items to make a new item to use. At times, the player encounters people in the game who can be talked with for clues and trivia. The game's main interface features a simple system connected to the mouse, in which the player left-clicks an object/person to use it/talk to, and right-click it to examine it, while a hint system, indicating interactive elements, can be activated by holding down the mouse's middle button.
The game's unique elements are special puzzles that the player can skip if they cannot solve them, a tutorial phase at the beginning, as well as a unique, humorous option available after completing the game, which when activated causes descriptions/names of objects and people, and all spoken dialog, to be changed to being only "Droggeljug".
Plot
Setting
The game's story takes place on the planet of Deponia - a world which originally was inhabited by a large human population, until the majority ascended towards living in a utopia-styled floating city called Elysium. Over time, the Elysians forgot their origins and past with the planet, assuming it to be nothing more than an uninhabitable world. For the remaining humans left behind, their home planet became a dumping ground for those who ascended, leaving them to make settlements amongst the trash that is regularly dumped on the surface's landmasses, with communities managing to thrive as best they can, and clean water considered the most valuable commodity for them.
Story
Seeking to follow in his father's footsteps, Rufus, a young man living in the town of Kuvaq, constructs a makeshift rocket in his latest attempt to travel to Elysium. After a mishap causes the rocket to break up in mid-flight, Rufus manages to land on a cruiser run by the Organnon - a militant organisation that terrorises the inhabitants of Deponia and regularly dumps trash on its surface with their craft. While aboard, he witnesses the Organnon, led by Baliff Argus, pursue a young Elysium woman named Goal, who is shocked that they have been covering up the fact that Deponia is still inhabited by humans. Argus reveals to Goal he intends to keep her quiet and prevent her informing others of what she saw, forcing Rufus to try to rescue her. After managing to inadvertently knock both of them off the ship, Rufus discovers she was knocked unconscious when she landed in Kuvaq and that the town's residents seek to have the honour of looking after her.
Wishing to prevent this and complete his rescue, he begins working on a way to revive Goal, and does so through a specially-made coffee created from bizarre ingredients he collects around town. When she awakens, Goal is found to be unable to speak properly as a result of her brain implant - a cartridge based system which stores an Elsyian's memory, that was damaged in the fall - though Rufus learns that her fiancé, Cletus, will reward him handsomely for her return. Sabotaging the town's post office to use its radio, Rufus contacts Cletus, and upon convincing him to take him to Elysium in exchange for the return of Goal, agrees to bring her to the Lower Ascension Station beyond the town's borders. Shortly after he makes the arrangements, Argus arrives in Kuvaq to track down Goal, forcing Rufus to escape with her before they can abduct her.
After travelling for some time, Rufus reaches a garbage mine, and seeks out transportation that can bring him to his destination much quickly. After fixing up a garbage mine bike with the help of Doc, a travelling maintenance man, Rufus continues on his journey, and eventually reaches the Lower Ascension Station with Goal. Leaving her to rest, Rufus seeks a way up to the station's platform at the top. After reprogramming a lift to take him up there, he soon finds that the Organnon have arrived at the station, along with Cletus. Listening in on his conversation with Argus, Rufus overhears them plotting together to prepare for Deponia's destruction with the Organnon's leader, Prime Controller Ulyssess, and that Goal is only needed for the codes needed to ascend back to Elysium stored, within her malfunctioning brain implant; once acquired, Cletus intends to wipe her memory, so she has no recollection of encountering life on the planet.
Seeking to prevent this, Rufus soon finds Goal missing, but follows a trail leading him to trawler vessel owned by Captain Bozo, in which he receives assistance once again from Doc. After fixing her implants, Goal awakens and is brought up to date by Rufus. Returning to the Station, the pair encounter Cletus, who tricks Goal into distrusting Rufus and forcing him to switch her memory cartridge for a back-up he had brought along. Ascending to Elysium but guilt-ridden by what he is doing, Rufus comes clean to Goal about the change of cartridges and returns to the planet to retrieve her memory cartridge at her request. Although Rufus retrieves it, he encounters Cletus and Argus, who force him to hand back the memory cartridge. While Cletus ascends back to Elysium with Goal, Argus prepares to deal with Rufus, who knows too much about their plans. However, Rufus refuses to hand back the back-up cartridge he still has, and manages to escape using Ulyssess' flying communicator system. In the aftermath, Rufus decides to travel with Captain Bozo, but remains quiet on what he knows of Deponia's future.
Reception
Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
GameRankings | 72.79% (19 reviews)[5] |
Metacritic | 74% (33 reviews)[6] |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
Adventure Gamers | [7] |
Destructoid | 7/10[8] |
GameSpot | 8/10[9] |
RPGFan | 80%[10] |
The Escapist | [11] |
Adventure Classic Gaming | [12] |
Deponia and its sequel, Chaos on Deponia, totaled 200,000 global sales by April 2013.[13] The first game alone had become Daedalic's highest-selling title, with sales of 500,000 units worldwide, by September of the following year. However, it was not the company's most profitable product by that time, as this distinction went to The Dark Eye: Blackguards.[14] The Deponia series overall achieved sales of 2.2 million copies by 2016, most of which derived from deep-discount sales, according to Daedalic's Carsten Fichtelmann. He noted that "full price sales were a little part of that [2.2 million] number".[15]
Deponia received generally good reviews from critics. Review aggregator Metacritic gives the game 74% (based on 33 reviews) and describes it as "a fast-paced comedy of errors and one of the most unusual love stories in gaming history" set in "a unique game world in the style of Douglas Adams, Terry Pratchett and Matt Groening."[16]
Some critics such as "Strategy Informer" slammed the game, saying "The plot moves glacially, and seems to be held up by puzzles that fail to complement it."[17] Destructoid agreed with this point, saying "The game prolongs dialogue with bad joke after bad joke, at times".[8]
However, the majority of critics and gamers liked the game overall, with key points of praise being "A brilliantly absurd story, a fitting comic style and strong speakers." (GamingXP),[18] "Deponia is an incredibly funny, affectionately designed adventure."[19] and "Deponia is one of the most entertaining point & click titles we've seen in the last couple of years."[20]
Kotaku gave the game a positive review, saying "The first in a planned trilogy of games that I like to think of as the Rufus Saga, Deponia is sharp, pretty and quirky-as-hell".[21]
See also
- Chaos on Deponia, second installment in the series
- Goodbye Deponia, third installment in the series
- Deponia Doomsday, fourth installment in the series
References
- ^ a b Estrada, Marcus (8 July 2014). "Deponia: The Complete Journey Launches on Steam - Hardcore Gamer". Hardcore Gamer. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
- ^ a b c "Deponia from Daedalic Entertainment is coming to iPads in August". Made For Gaming. 5 July 2015.
- ^ Published under the name Lace Mamba Global: "Several indie devs rally together against publisher Lace Mamba". Eurogamer.net. Eurogamer. Retrieved 14 July 2016.
- ^ Deponia (Video Game 2012), retrieved 19 December 2017
- ^ "Deponia for PC - GameRankings". GameRankings. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ "Deponia for PC Reviews - Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ Morganti, Emily (2 July 2012). "Deponia review - AdventureGamers.com". Adventure Gamers. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ a b Pinsof, Allistair (6 August 2012). "Review: Deponia - Destructoid". Destructoid. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ Walton, Mark (28 June 2012). "Deponia Review - GameSpot". GameSpot. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ Hansen, Sam (20 August 2012). "RPGFan Review - Deponia". RPGFan. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ Chalk, Andy (14 August 2012). "Deponia Review | Reviews". The Escapist. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ Barton, Matt (19 September 2012). "Deponia - Deponia: Limited Edition - Review". Adventure Classic Gaming. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ "New screenshots released, confirmed E3 appearance– and original Deponia on sale on Steam today (66% OFF)!" (Press release). Hamburg: Develop. 24 April 2013. Archived from the original on 17 July 2018.
{{cite press release}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Holowaty, Christoph (3 September 2014). "Fichtelmann: "Bei uns ist Game-Design kreative Diktatur"". GamesIndustry.biz. Archived from the original on 20 September 2014.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Karkalemis, Manos (28 February 2016). "Interviews with the Daedalic Entertainment team". Ragequit.gr. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Deponia". Metacritic. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
- ^ "Deponia PC Review | GameWatcher". www.strategyinformer.com. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 January 2013. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Deponia - Test, Adventure - 4Players.de". 4Players (in German). Retrieved 19 December 2017.
- ^ "Deponia Review". XGN.nl. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
- ^ Fahey, Mike. "Deponia is the Biggest Pile of Trash I've Ever Had the Pleasure of Escaping". Kotaku. Retrieved 11 September 2016.