Players can expect plenty of eye-rollingly vague references to Very Important Things (which are always capitalized) and cynical speeches on the downfalls of classism and wealth inequality. The narrative is fine for what it is, but it does tend to flog conventional tropes of the cyberpunk genre a little too flagrantly at times. At the apex of this Tower of Babel is the enigmatic Mara, an evil ruler who needs to be deposed because she’s an evil ruler, and you’re guided on your murderous journey to the top by voices in your head who swear they’re on your side. You play as the titular Ghostrunner, a cybernetic ninja who has conveniently misplaced his memory, trapped at the base of an industrial tower which supposedly acts as the living quarters for the last surviving members of the human race. Ghostrunner’s story is rather straightforward, which can be a positive or a negative depending on how you look at it. However, though Ghostrunner does deliver mostly on that promise, it comes with some big caveats (especially in the Switch version) which unfortunately hold it back from being something truly great. Ghostrunner is the latest in this hi-tech, low-life lineage, promising to place you in the shoes of a badass cyborg ninja as he slices and dices his way through hordes of baddies with style and aplomb. ![]() ![]() It seems the cyberpunk genre has seen something of a resurgence in the indie game scene lately, no doubt spurred on by CDProjektRed’s anticipated tentpole release which now appears set to launch somewhere in the actual year 2077 (only kidding, of course! It's sure to be here by at least 2055). Captured on Nintendo Switch (Handheld/Undocked)
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