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Cursed Mountain Preview

Wii Preview by Dan Pearson

23 June, 2009

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Most mythology, by definition, has been around for donkey's years - when you're dealing with ancient legends and creation stories it's hard to come up with new material. One way around the problem is to write your own, but encapsulating the cultural history of a civilisation in a believable and interesting way - within the confines of time, budget and narrative arc - is no mean feat.

It's good, then, to see a developer making an effort to diversify from the usual menagerie of Judeo Christian angel/demon dichotomy or the faux Oriental MacGuffin. Initially, Deep Silver's choice of ancient Buddhist scriptural influence seems like an odd direction for a game which has been billed as survival horror. After all, isn't Buddhism about peace, understanding and cultivating exciting new strains of tofu?

Well, sort of. There's certainly more than an occasional nod to Buddhism's respect for life and common decency in the Cursed Mountain demo I'm being shown, but there's a great deal to do with the darker side of the mythology too.

Players control professional climber Eric Simmons, on a quest to locate his brother Frank. His impetuous younger sibling is late back from an expedition in the Himalayas in search of a Terma, a repository of ancient Buddhist wisdom hidden somewhere on the summit of the sacred mountain Chomolonzo. This being the eighties there are no handy mountain rescue helicopters or GPS systems to rely on; Frank needs to be fetched the hard way.

'Cursed Mountain' Screenshot 1

Some nice tricks are played with the lighting, and indeed the lack of it.

Handily enough our Eric has been climbing nearby, and as such is acclimatised and hot to trot when he's called in to go looking for his brother. Arriving in Lhando, the highest city in the world at 5000 metres up, he must gather information on the nature of his brother's quest before kicking on his crampons and heading uphill. It's not long before the mysterious and perilous nature of his undertaking becomes apparent, however - there are worse things on this mountain than frostbite and gooey Kendal mint cake.

Turns out the peak is under a terrible curse: anybody who dies there is bound forever to the Buddhist equivalent of purgatory, known as the Bardo. This is a realm in between life and death in which souls are considered for Nirvana; those found wanting are usually returned to the lifestream to be appropriately reincarnated.

Being trapped in this non-world for centuries is no picnic - the souls you'll encounter during Eric's approach to the peak are twisted, malignant beasts, stripped of humanity and compassion over the course of their time in the howling void.

Thankfully, Eric has a few advantages when dealing with the denizens of the Bardo. One of the first items he accrues is a pickaxe belonging to his missing brother. Being members of a terribly close family, the Simmons boys share a 'psychic link', enabling them to share memories when they encounter objects which the other has held, or entering places where they've been recently.

'Cursed Mountain' Screenshot 2

High in the Himalayas or deepest darkest Swindon? Hard to tell.

As it happens, the pickaxe has also been enchanted by Buddhist prayer rituals, enabling it to interact with the Bardo, defeat the trapped spirits and free them from their imprisonment. This is done in two ways; firstly the axe is a basic melee weapon, and slashing with a tap of the Z button damages spirits directly. Secondly, ritual items and charms can be attached to the head of the axe, turning it into a ranged weapon which shoots bolts of spiritual energy.

When spirits appear, they're often accompanied by a manifestation of a 'shadow rift' - essentially a spiritual barrier which boxes the player in and forces them to fight rather than flee. Combat then usually follows a three stage process. Initially comes melee crowd management, a matter of knocking away enemies in order to line them up for ranged damage.

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Comments: 1-15 of 15 in total

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MeBrains
23/06/09 @ 10:54
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hmmm... one to watch then... and eventually continue to do so, since my kid will not be allowed to play this.
DFawkes
23/06/09 @ 11:00
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I'd not heard of this. Sounds good, I'll take a nice bit of survival horror on any platform :)
Der_tolle_Emil
23/06/09 @ 11:13
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Sounds like it is coming along nicely. Hopefully there won't be too much combat because that eventually lessens the impact on the game's atmosphere. I prefer fewer but more intense battles in games like these.
farticusmaximus
23/06/09 @ 11:50
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This seems to have come out of nowhere, and it's sounding quite promising.

+1 to 'less combat please', and what combat there is should be more Dead Space than Resident Fumble.
GreyBeard
23/06/09 @ 11:59
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This sounds really promising, definitely one to keep on the Wii radar.
Fletche
23/06/09 @ 12:03
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Been following this for ages now, showed promise at the start and I'm so glad to seems ot be fullfilling that promise! Love the setting and the time zone (the 80's) it is set in, means we have less technology that can only add to the atmosphere.
AliRay
23/06/09 @ 14:10
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"Overall, however, Cursed Mountain gives the impression of being a dark and adult-orientated game"

Translation: This will not sell on Wii, and will disappear into the ether quickly after release. Shame, cos it sounds pretty good!
lemonfist
23/06/09 @ 14:39
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Sounds like a nice recipe for a game. I happen to like walking around in big snowy mountains with an enchanted pickaxe.
wizbob
23/06/09 @ 16:16
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I like the name 'Cursed Mountain' - it's about a mountain that's cursed; there is no colon, strapline or number. It does not require 'Dark', 'Bane' or 'Eternal' in the title.
YenRug
23/06/09 @ 16:28
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Looks like Swindon, to me...
elvenearth
24/06/09 @ 08:14
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Intriguing and interesting. Its nice to see mythologies being explored in this way.
smelly
24/06/09 @ 20:52
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>Translation: This will not sell on Wii,


Why wont it? Name 1 GOOD "adult orientated" game with GOOD marketing which proves your theory?

zakrocz
27/06/09 @ 13:02
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>Translation: This will not sell on Wii,

Why wont it? Name 1 GOOD "adult orientated" game with GOOD marketing which proves your theory?


Or how about name 1 GOOD "adult orientated" game on the Wii fullstop :D
cobaltfram
18/08/09 @ 01:21
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This looks to be on the road to piddling Wii-mediocrity.
telboy007
21/08/09 @ 21:43
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Hmm, the ad for this game currently on the site gives me the ghey.

Comments: 1-15 of 15 in total

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