5 Games We’re Looking Forward to in January
January is a notorious dumping ground for the worst movies, dreck that somehow avoids a straight-to-VOD release and actually sneaks into theaters for a week or two. With games the situation is slightly different. Usually there just aren’t that many games released in January at all. The industry’s still recovering from the holiday onslaught. There’s often a lot of quality found in January’s slim pickings, though, and it’s a great month to release a smaller game that maybe would’ve been swallowed up by the hype over the latest shooter or Ubisoft-style map expander. Some of the best games of 2014 came out in January, like OlliOlli, Nidhogg, The Banner Saga and Broken Age. Maybe this January will be as strong?
1. Life is Strange
Release Date: 1/30
Platforms: PC, Playstation 3, Playstation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One
Life is Strange is a wildcard. It’s always getting compared to Gone Home, which is good, and to Heavy Rain, which is as bad as bad can get. Basically that just means it’s a game about a woman who doesn’t seem to shoot anybody. We need more games about women, and we need more games where not every interaction ends with a corpse. And the developers, Dontnod Entertainment, put forth a fine effort with their last game, Remember Me (which at this point I think is only remembered by people who write for Paste.) The best parts of Remember Me was its sense of place and character, which makes me think Dontnod could do a good job with a graphic adventure like Life is Strange. Hopefully the first episode isn’t as consistently morose as the trailer indicates—my goth tolerance wears out by the sixth minute of “Pictures of You.”
2. Grim Fandango Remastered
Release Date: 1/27
Platforms: Playstation 4, Vita, PC, Mac, Linux
Here’s where I admit to never playing yet another classic game. If Grim Fandango had come out on the Nintendo 64 back in 1998 it probably would’ve wound up in my system at some point, but my deep lifelong ambivalence towards PC gaming prevented me from digging into it at the time. (I play PC games sometimes now. I’m a professional.) Now the time has come to finally see why everybody loves this game more than all of the other games, or, if you are one of the faithful acolytes, to welcome that magic back into your heart one more time. Tim Schafer’s done some good things. Maybe this is one of them. As happens with all remasters, some longtime fans will probably hate this. Their arguments will mean nothing to me.
3. Saints Row IV: Gat Out of Hell
Release Date: 1/20
Platforms: PC, Playstation 4, Xbox One