Insist on 1000xRESIST—One of 2024’s Best New Games

After hours of experiencing 1000xRESIST’s bizarre sci-fi world, full of otherworldly social mores and bewitching technological advancements, my favorite scene takes place in a dark, cramped, and quiet stairwell. Iris, one of the game’s central characters, is having a conversation with her mother. At one point, Iris’ mother quietly says, “The human and the brain? We are poor technology. Too capable of storing clutter. Too desperate to hold onto things.”
She’s right, because I’m desperate to hold onto 1000xRESIST. It’s the kind of game that can leave you feeling transformed. Few are the games as bold and brave and brilliant as this one; throughout its 15 hours, there’s a palpable eagerness to take the risks that many other teams would shy away from, especially considering this is Sunset Visitor’s debut game. 1000xRESIST is a dazzling testament to the stories this medium has yet to tell; an exemplification of the best that small yet ambitious teams can create; and a gateway to a future in which more videogame narratives have the courage and soul to tackle the ideas that it executes with equal precision and grace. It’s simply triumphant in everything it sets out to do.
From its opening moments, 1000xRESIST doesn’t hold back: it starts with Watcher, the protagonist of the game, murdering Iris, otherwise known as the ALLMOTHER. As the ALLMOTHER, Iris is the last human and a teenage girl who keeps the aliens known as the Occupants at bay, protecting what’s left of planet Earth after their invasion. Over time, she has become the god figure to a society composed of sister clones who aspire to be embraced by her. As a sister who has arisen to a semblance of power, Watcher’s function is to travel through time in Communions to witness Iris’ life and gain a deeper understanding of their messiah. She exists in harmony with five other special sisters — Principal, Healer, Knower, Fixer, and the excellently named Bang Bang Fire—to serve Iris so that they may transition to the Other Side, the place where Iris now exists. But these Communions enlighten Watcher much more than she expected, resulting in a life-altering, dimensions-defying, and world-defining journey.
That journey is a deeply affecting exploration about so many things that you’d assume 1000xRESIST would buckle under all the weight; however, the writing is so masterful that it seems to effortlessly juggle its themes. Race, the hardships of being a first-generation immigrant, sisterhood, forgiveness, what we take with us into the future and what we leave behind, the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hong Kong protests that began in 2019, motherhood, mental health, identity: listing all these topics feels like I’m only scratching the surface. Its dense world has been created with deep care, and it was impossible not to be swept up by its intricacies. Exposition is rarely, if ever, delivered to you straight—1000xRESIST is a masterclass in making its audience yearn for answers. It’s unafraid to jump between timelines and delve into the abstract and, at one point, disorient you entirely for several hours.