OC What unique mechanics have you seen lately that “made the game”?

I’ve been going out of my way lately to find unique mechanics, UI’s, etc. that fundamentally alter and improve a game, to the extent that their removal would severely hurt the game and make it less effective/impactful/etc. To be clear this is less “unplayable,” so not something silly like “removing the right thumb stick from Halo.”

Instead, I think of how Immortality essentially “gamified” and simplified a movieola (35mm film editing hardware) to be the player’s interface with the game. The process of scrubbing through footage, marking favorite clips, cropping in on items of interest, “match cutting” (sort of), made for an incredibly immersive experience. Honorable mention goes to the music raising and lowering or shifting as I sped through or slowed down on footage - it created such a unique gaming experience.

What are some examples for y’all?

Katharta,
Katharta avatar

Ctrl Alt Ego is a recent indie immersive sim built around the mechanic of jumping into and controlling various robots and objects, which opens up so many possibilities and paths to progression. You can fight enemies yourself, sneak past, take them over, get them to attack each other, even skip entire sections if you're clever. It's chock full of whimsical British humor and charming writing, very clearly a labor of love and passion. The entire plot revolves around the idea of yeeting yourself into things though, so taking that out would certainly change the experience entirely. It's a fun twist on the imsim genre and well worth checking out.

hoodatninja,
hoodatninja avatar

That sounds awesome. Checking it out tonight!

sonovebitch,

I got kinda hooked for a bit on Potionomics. The card-based haggling “combat” system isn’t anything revolutionary, but it just works very well and is fun to play. I also found the side “activities” to gather materials engaging. And on top of it the presentation is super polished. Love it.

Skray,
Skray avatar

I recently played an indie game called Iron Danger that allowed you to rewind time.

It was a party based real-time-with-pause tactical RPG. So you'd pause, command your 2 party members to use their skills and then rewind if things didn't go exactly right.

It led to combat being a really interesting puzzle where you're playing with the timing of skills to block a hit at the right moment, get a knockdown off before an enemy hits you, or trying to position your characters just right.

It's a nice twist on the typical tactical RPG combat that sort of merges turn based and RTWP combat. Timing matters, where normally in a RTWP combat you wouldn't have the ability to fine tune your actions, and in turn based timing doesn't matter at all.

Katsono,

Speaking of time mechanics, Touhou Luna Nights is a pretty short metroidvania where you play as a character that can stop time and they really nailed the time stop mechanic. You can use it to avoid the very difficult to dodge attacks from the bosses and they're an essential strategy to counter some of the attacks, what's more they allow you to launch a lot of daggers which will only hit when you restart time and that is very satisfying to do. The plateforming also benefited from it, with things such as moving platforms to freeze or climbing on top of the daggers you launch yourself after stopping time.

hoodatninja,

I played that on gamepass a year or so ago and it was incredibly fun/dynamic. I say this as someone who isn’t a fan of metroidvanias typically.

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