![]() Conarium provides very few encounters that give you a rush. Imagine what happens to gameplay with that character. His most action act is breaking ice/stone with a few blows of an axe. Gilman, cannot jump, attack, or do anything more than running. Conarium’s atmosphere is full and robust lighting, sound, camera, engravings, and architecture together made a dark and uneasy world where the best motive for moving is the urge/need for getting out, but not much more! Everything fits where it sits, yet the core lacks the excitement and rush that one expects from a product in this genre. It seems whenever there is a game whose atmosphere, story, theme, and locations are a bit diabolic and frightening, that has nasty creatures in it, has much blood, and is creepy overall, people would refer to it as ‘Lovecraftian.’ If you have ever read a book from the author, let us know more about him in the comments section below. Regarding the opening quote and the first object to be found, it seems the idea of the work came from a book written by Haward Philip Lovecraft. Like always, you do not remember what has happened, electricity is out, and there are lots of papers and notes scattered around. In Conarium, you are a scientist/professor who is lost in a research facility situated in the Arctics. ![]() We have reviewed the PC version in Bazinegar. Conarium came out back in 2017 but it is still holding and is highly up to date. It is a fine work with the Metascore of 71. After reading this article, check out the review of What Happened to see the similarities.Ĭonarium was developed by the Turkish Zoetrope Interactive and published by Iceberg Interactive for all the 8th gen consoles and PC. With these premises, we are going to review a game that took its idea from a book, and like What Happened, focused on mental themes. In the article ‘Where Do the Ideas Come From,’ it was mentioned that one of the sources is books. A lot of video games and movies adopted such fears. One psychological factor that creates mental fear is the suspense originated in forgetting or not knowing what comes next: the fear of the unknown. ![]() In the review of What Happened, we referred to psychoanalysis and the role it plays in arts.
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