Thursday, September 19, 2013

Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons Review: Do Not Separate

Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons is an essential treasure to play. I promise, the game's sincere quality absolves the terribleness of its title, which is barely a step up from "Characters: A Story of Them."

And yet it truly is a story of them, two boys who leave their humble village behind in a quest for a mythical cure. Their father has fallen ill, and with the loss of Mother ever-fresh in mind, the brothers hope to pluck the solution from a far-off magical tree and undo the fragility that has befallen their family.

The involvement of Stockholm-based film director Josef Fares is in plain sight, the camera looking down upon the two boys as they crawl under forests and over frigid mountains. Keeping both characters in frame emphasizes the necessity of cooperation between the two, while the top-down view makes their movements easier to comprehend, as if they were twin hockey pucks gliding across the ice. As much as it may seem to be a traditional co-op game, Brothers divides the attention of a single player between two bodies, with tall Big Brother on the left analog stick and golden-haired Little Brother on the right.

Continue reading Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons Review: Do Not Separate

JoystiqBrothers: A Tale of Two Sons Review: Do Not Separate originally appeared on Joystiq on Wed, 07 Aug 2013 03:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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