Paste‘s Favorite Games from E3 2019

Every year, without fail, gaming Christmas (the Electronic Entertainment Expo) descends upon the Los Angeles Convention Center, bestowing gifts and goodies to everybody in attendance. Even if this year was a bit quieter (as some of the industry heavyweights, such as Sony, chose to not participate directly), there were still a number of great games to be found on the show floor and at E3-adjacent events. Paste’s Dante Douglas was at the show for Paste, and has written about the best games he played and saw. Check it out below.
Biomutant
Developed by Experiment 101 and published by THQ Nordic, Biomutant is an open world, cyber-animal combat adventure, following a plucky young raccoon as they fight to survive in a human-less, post-apocalyptic world. The demo at this year’s E3 began with a fairly customizable character creator, which not only allows you to change the raccoon’s gender, but their fur length, color and texture, before diving into a guided tour of the game’s combat and exploration. Biomutant comes across as a stylish, smooth, and gorgeous adventure with a slick, unique aesthetic.
The Outer Worlds
Presented as a hands-off demo available by appointment only, The Outer Worlds is as much of a spiritual sequel to Fallout: New Vegas as it is an ambitious dive into an entire new fictional universe. From what’s been shown, the game has just as much narrative choice as it’s post-apocalyptic predecessor, and developer Obsidian stressed that player choice in gameplay was at the top of their priorities. Outside of gunplay (which includes a slick integration of companion characters’ special abilities and a limited use time-slow mechanic), players can argue, hack, sabotage, or schmooze their way through encounters. It looks like Obsidian at their best.
Werewolf: The Apocalypse — Earthblood
A complete surprise on the show floor, from developer Cyanide and published by Bigben Interactive, Werewolf: The Apocalypse — Earthblood is an action brawler with a supernatural twist, as you play as a werewolf on a mission to stop economic development of natural lands and resources by a polluting megacorporation. While the game is nowhere near release (the developer guiding the demo stressed that it was in a “pre-pre-alpha” state), the mechanics and action were close to their final incarnation. Free form shapeshifting between man and wolf, coupled with a hulking werewolf form for melee combat, all to take down some corporations that are destroying the earth? Sounds pretty good to me.
Half Past Fate
A romantic comedy adventure game from developers Serenity Forge, Half Past Fate tells the story of six characters and their various connections, romantic and friendly, from a time of eight hours to eight years. Using traditional adventure game puzzle mechanics and visual-novel-style narration, it’s a cute, relatable story that hops between viewpoints and time periods to color in the entire story, with some top-notch pixel art and stellar writing to back it up. Expect a release later this year.